A Theory of Time-Sensitive Language Generation: Sparse Hallucination Beats Mode Collapse
Mirrored from arXiv — Machine Learning for archival readability. Support the source by reading on the original site.
arXiv:2605.11302v1 Announce Type: new
Abstract: We study language generation in the limit under a global preference ordering on strings, as introduced by Kleinberg and Wei. As in [arXiv:2504.14370, arXiv:2511.05295], we aim for \emph{breadth}, but impose an additional requirement of timeliness: higher-ranked strings should be generated earlier. A string is then only credited if it is generated before a deadline, where its deadline is defined by a function that maps a string's rank in the target language to the time by which it must be produced. This is in keeping with a central consideration in machine learning, where inductive bias favors ``simpler'' or ``more plausible'' outputs, all else being equal. We show that timely generation is impossible in a strong sense for eventually consistent generators -- the protagonists of most prior related work. Under what is perhaps the mildest natural relaxation of consistency, a hallucination rate that vanishes over time, we show that we can circumvent our impossibility result. In particular, we can achieve optimal density with respect to any superlinear deadline function. We also show this is tight by ruling out timely generation with linear deadlines and vanishing hallucination rate.
More from arXiv — Machine Learning
-
Interpretable EEG Microstate Discovery via Variational Deep Embedding: A Systematic Architecture Search with Multi-Quadrant Evaluation
May 13
-
QuIDE: Mastering the Quantized Intelligence Trade-off via Active Optimization
May 13
-
Steering Without Breaking: Mechanistically Informed Interventions for Discrete Diffusion Language Models
May 13
-
Rotation-Preserving Supervised Fine-Tuning
May 13
Discussion (0)
Sign in to join the discussion. Free account, 30 seconds — email code or GitHub.
Sign in →No comments yet. Sign in and be the first to say something.