MATS Alumnus
Constantin Venhoff, Jake Ward
Collabortators
Jake Ward, Chuqiao Lin, Constantin Venhoff, Neel Nanda
Citations
Abstract
Backtracking, an emergent behavior elicited by reasoning fine-tuning, has been shown to be a key mechanism in reasoning models'enhanced capabilities. Prior work has succeeded in manipulating this behavior via steering vectors, but the underlying mechanism remains poorly understood. In this work, we show that the emergence of backtracking in DeepSeek-R1-Distill-Llama-8B is in part driven by a repurposed direction already present in base model activations. Specifically, we identify a direction in base Llama-3.1-8B's residual stream which systematically induces backtracking when used to steer the distilled reasoning model, and find that the effects of steering with this direction cannot be trivially explained by token-level attributes. We further find that this direction does not induce backtracking in the base model, suggesting that the reasoning finetuning process repurposes pre-existing representations to form new behavioral circuits. Additionally, we hypothesize that this direction is one of several which may work together to mediate backtracking. Our findings offer a compelling picture that reasoning-finetuned models repurpose pre-existing base model representations, rather than learn new capabilities from scratch.
Weird Generalization and Inductive Backdoors: New Ways to Corrupt LLMs
Authors:
Jorio Cocola, Dylan Feng
Date:
December 10, 2025
Citations:
0
AI agents find $4.6M in blockchain smart contract exploits
Authors:
Fellow: Winnie Xiao
Date:
December 1, 2025
Citations:
0
The MATS Program is an independent research and educational initiative connecting emerging researchers with mentors in AI alignment, governance, and security.
Each MATS cohort runs for 12 weeks in Berkeley, California, followed by an optional 6–12 month extension in London for selected scholars.