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by famouswaffles
184 days ago
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Yes, technically you can frame an LLM as a Markov chain by defining the "state" as the entire sequence of previous tokens. But this is a vacuous observation under that definition, literally any deterministic or stochastic process becomes a Markov chain if you make the state space flexible enough. A chess game is a "Markov chain" if the state includes the full board position and move history. The weather is a "Markov chain" if the state includes all relevant atmospheric variables. The problem is that this definition strips away what makes Markov models useful and interesting as a modeling framework. A “Markov text model” is a low-order Markov model (e.g., n-grams) with a fixed, tractable state and transitions based only on the last k tokens. LLMs aren’t that: they model using un-fixed long-range context (up to the window). For Markov chains, k is non-negotiable. It's a constant, not a variable. Once you make it a variable, near any process can be described as markovian, and the word is useless. |
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