Skip to yearly menu bar Skip to main content


Poster

Algorithmic progress in language models

Wing Hin Anson Ho · Tamay Besiroglu · Ege Erdil · Zifan Guo · David Owen · Robi Rahman · David Atkinson · Neil Thompson · Jaime Sevilla

East Exhibit Hall A-C #1908
[ ] [ Project Page ]
Wed 11 Dec 11 a.m. PST — 2 p.m. PST

Abstract:

We investigate the rate at which algorithms for pre-training language models have improved since the advent of deep learning. Using a dataset of over 200 language model evaluations on Wikitext and Penn Treebank spanning 2012-2023, we find that the compute required to reach a set performance threshold has halved approximately every 8 months, with a 90\% confidence interval of around 2 to 22 months, substantially faster than hardware gains per Moore's Law. We estimate augmented scaling laws, which enable us to quantify algorithmic progress and determine the relative contributions of scaling models versus innovations in training algorithms. Despite the rapid pace of algorithmic progress and the development of new architectures such as the transformer, our analysis reveals that the increase in compute made an even larger contribution to overall performance improvements over this time period. Though limited by noisy benchmark data, our analysis quantifies the rapid progress in language modeling, shedding light on the relative contributions from compute and algorithms.

Live content is unavailable. Log in and register to view live content