Yep, the intuition here indeed was that L1 penalised reconstruction seems to be okay for teaching a standard SAE’s encoder to detect which features are on (even if features get shrunk as a result), so that is effectively what this auxiliary loss is teaching the gate sub-layer to do, alongside the sparsity penalty. (The key difference being we freeze the decoder in the auxiliary task, which the ablation study shows helps performance.) Maybe to put it another way, this was an auxiliary task that we had good evidence would teach the gate sublayer to detect active features reasonably well, and it turned out to give good results in practice. It’s totally possible though that there are better auxiliary tasks (or even completely different loss functions) out there that we’ve not explored.
Yep, the intuition here indeed was that L1 penalised reconstruction seems to be okay for teaching a standard SAE’s encoder to detect which features are on (even if features get shrunk as a result), so that is effectively what this auxiliary loss is teaching the gate sub-layer to do, alongside the sparsity penalty. (The key difference being we freeze the decoder in the auxiliary task, which the ablation study shows helps performance.) Maybe to put it another way, this was an auxiliary task that we had good evidence would teach the gate sublayer to detect active features reasonably well, and it turned out to give good results in practice. It’s totally possible though that there are better auxiliary tasks (or even completely different loss functions) out there that we’ve not explored.