MATS Alumnus
Marius Hobbhahn, Elizabeth Donoway, Rauno Arike
Collabortators
Rauno Arike, Elizabeth Donoway, Henning Bartsch, Marius Hobbhahn
Citations
Abstract
As language models (LMs) are increasingly deployed as autonomous agents, their robust adherence to human-assigned objectives becomes crucial for safe operation. When these agents operate independently for extended periods without human oversight, even initially well-specified goals may gradually shift. Detecting and measuring goal drift - an agent's tendency to deviate from its original objective over time - presents significant challenges, as goals can shift gradually, causing only subtle behavioral changes. This paper proposes a novel approach to analyzing goal drift in LM agents. In our experiments, agents are first explicitly given a goal through their system prompt, then exposed to competing objectives through environmental pressures. We demonstrate that while the best-performing agent (a scaffolded version of Claude 3.5 Sonnet) maintains nearly perfect goal adherence for more than 100,000 tokens in our most difficult evaluation setting, all evaluated models exhibit some degree of goal drift. We also find that goal drift correlates with models' increasing susceptibility to pattern-matching behaviors as the context length grows.
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.