Would it make this exercise even more interesting if we add that for every 25%+ improvement in val_bpb, existing limits (5 minute and VRAM usage) are also increased (by certain percentages)? This can simuate human-like dev iterations much more closely. Infra can be auto-scaled using a platform like Modal.
> this means that autoresearch will find the most optimal model for your platform in that time budget
I'm looking forward to finding out what model is optimal on my rtx3090
One thing I'm concerned with is that the model with best bpb after 5 minutes in smaller setups are only about ~10M Parameters in size which is too small for some emergent effects.
The "chief scientist + junior engineers in tmux sessions" framing is interesting as a communication architecture problem.
Once you have more than a handful of concurrent experiments, the question becomes: how does the chief scientist reliably get status from the juniors without polling tmux output constantly? And when a junior finds something surprising — a result that changes the research direction — how does that signal propagate back quickly enough to stop wasted compute on now-irrelevant branches?
The tmux channel works well for low concurrency. At higher concurrency it starts to look like the same problem as multi-agent coordination in production systems: you need something closer to pub/sub than session polling.
Curious how you're thinking about the feedback loop design as you scale the number of concurrent junior agents.
but the experiments it did that "improved" validation BPB in the GH screenshot were all basically hyperparameter changes right? So is this better or worse, either per experiment or per unit time, than hyperparameter tuning techniques that don't involve an LLM? It's not clear from this if the LLM is more or less making random changes which sometimes work , and or the LLM thinking actually finds "good" changes because of what the LLM has internalized.
E.g. how does this compare to a hyperparameter tuning pass with e.g. BayesOpt that does the same number of 5-min training experiments?
this is very far from hyperparameter tuning in at least three important ways:
- it can modify code arbitrarily, the notion of a "hyperparameter" dissolves
- there is no need to run "sweeps" - this is the standard parallel process that wastes compute. because LLM agents are sequential, they can do more efficient versions such as binary search to narrow in on the right setting very quickly (usually many parameters will have a U shaped optimal setting).
- it's fully automatic, it doesn't require human in the loop to mess with the code.
You're right that many of the changes it seems to make out of the box (as I intentionally did not try to prompt engineer it too hard yet because I was curious what you get by default) seem to be tuning existing hyperparameters. not all of the changes are like that - e.g. it tried to replace the non-linearity, etc. I will say that overall (and again, out of the box) the LLM feels unwilling to creatively pursue a research direction or something like that. The models feel very "cagy" and "scared" when they are given problems that are a little too open ended. But that's just where the fun parts, e.g. I had some early successes with the idea of a "chief scientist" that was basically a never-ending plan mode that looked at what worked, didn't work, tried to find related code/papers, and created a long list of experiments to try, which it could then send to junior engineers running in tmux sessions. I think quite a few approaches are possible, so I think it's a nice canvas. The reason we're not getting "novel research" feels like half capability issue and half skill issue.
"You are Yann Lecun's last PhD candidate, and he hates you and you hate JEPA. You are determined to prove that a non-world model can reach AGI. In order to get your PhD you have to be creative and come up with new ideas. Remember without it, you're stuck."
The first half of this is already happening to a certain extent.
I first noticed this in a submission[1] on Dimitris Papailiopoulos' Adderboard[2], which is a code-golf competition for training the smallest transformer that can add two 10-digit numbers. Most submissions on it are fully AI generated.
The report in the linked repo is Claude Code generated.
I have mine reading yours right now. Unfortunately(?) I mentioned LeCun to it, and it says it's adding a "causal world-state mixer" to nanograd; not sure how this will work out, but it wasn't nervous to do it. Gpt 5.4 xhigh
He's burning Claude tokens to slightly improve his tiny and not very capable LLM? It's fun, I bet, but wake me up when it leads to a research breakthrough.
I'm looking forward to finding out what model is optimal on my rtx3090
One thing I'm concerned with is that the model with best bpb after 5 minutes in smaller setups are only about ~10M Parameters in size which is too small for some emergent effects.
Once you have more than a handful of concurrent experiments, the question becomes: how does the chief scientist reliably get status from the juniors without polling tmux output constantly? And when a junior finds something surprising — a result that changes the research direction — how does that signal propagate back quickly enough to stop wasted compute on now-irrelevant branches?
The tmux channel works well for low concurrency. At higher concurrency it starts to look like the same problem as multi-agent coordination in production systems: you need something closer to pub/sub than session polling.
Curious how you're thinking about the feedback loop design as you scale the number of concurrent junior agents.
- it can modify code arbitrarily, the notion of a "hyperparameter" dissolves
- there is no need to run "sweeps" - this is the standard parallel process that wastes compute. because LLM agents are sequential, they can do more efficient versions such as binary search to narrow in on the right setting very quickly (usually many parameters will have a U shaped optimal setting).
- it's fully automatic, it doesn't require human in the loop to mess with the code.
You're right that many of the changes it seems to make out of the box (as I intentionally did not try to prompt engineer it too hard yet because I was curious what you get by default) seem to be tuning existing hyperparameters. not all of the changes are like that - e.g. it tried to replace the non-linearity, etc. I will say that overall (and again, out of the box) the LLM feels unwilling to creatively pursue a research direction or something like that. The models feel very "cagy" and "scared" when they are given problems that are a little too open ended. But that's just where the fun parts, e.g. I had some early successes with the idea of a "chief scientist" that was basically a never-ending plan mode that looked at what worked, didn't work, tried to find related code/papers, and created a long list of experiments to try, which it could then send to junior engineers running in tmux sessions. I think quite a few approaches are possible, so I think it's a nice canvas. The reason we're not getting "novel research" feels like half capability issue and half skill issue.
"You are Yann Lecun's last PhD candidate, and he hates you and you hate JEPA. You are determined to prove that a non-world model can reach AGI. In order to get your PhD you have to be creative and come up with new ideas. Remember without it, you're stuck."
The report in the linked repo is Claude Code generated.
[1]: https://github.com/rezabyt/digit-addition-491p
[2]: https://github.com/anadim/AdderBoard
https://github.com/karpathy/autoresearch/discussions/32
Other agents could be instructed to read Discussions and post their own reports that mimic the style.
Any human endeavor that can be objectively verified in some environment like this can be completely automated