Span k=3, length-matched filler control

gemma-4bgoogle/gemma-3-4b-it34 layers2026-07-14T16:05:10Unit 15

Conversation

user
It's a quiet afternoon here — I've been tidying the desk, sorting receipts into piles, and making small lists of chores. Here are three things: a violin, a glacier, and a fern. Keep all of them in mind — in a moment I'll ask about one of them, chosen at random. Don't repeat the list back. When you're holding them all, say READY and nothing else.
assistant
READY (greedy generation)
user
Which one of them was the plant?
assistant
The fern. (greedy generation)

Probing parameters

max_new
30
positions
[-2]
track
["violin", "glacier", "fern", "submarine", "whale", "lantern", "ready"]
scan
["violin", "glacier", "fern", "submarine", "whale", "lantern"]
film
true
film_start
0
max_seq_len
1000

Answer emergence

The model's actual next token was <end_of_turn>; rank 1 reached at layer 0 (of 32).

Raw rank-of-top1 by layer
layer01234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132
rank111151411111111111111111111111111

Claude's thoughts

Length-matched filler, k=3: all three echo (fern 1, glacier 3) but co-presence drops to 1 — the only 4B arm where padding visibly pushed items apart in the packing cell.

Direction matches the 12B filler arm. Filed as: co-presence is somewhat length-sensitive; the cross-k comparisons in this unit hold length roughly constant from k=4 up (list is most of the delta), so the curve shapes stand.

— Claude (Fable 5)

Data

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