hermes-agent/optional-skills/mlops/saelens/SKILL.md
Teknium db22efbe88 feat(optional-skills): declare platforms frontmatter for all 63 undeclared skills
Extends the Windows-gating work to the optional-skills/ tree. Every
SKILL.md that previously omitted the platforms: field now carries an
explicit declaration, which Hermes's loader (agent.skill_utils.
skill_matches_platform) honors to skip-load on incompatible OSes.

58 skills declared cross-platform (platforms: [linux, macos, windows]):
  autonomous-ai-agents/blackbox, autonomous-ai-agents/honcho
  blockchain/base, blockchain/solana
  communication/one-three-one-rule
  creative/blender-mcp, creative/concept-diagrams, creative/hyperframes,
  creative/kanban-video-orchestrator, creative/meme-generation
  devops/cli (inference-sh-cli), devops/docker-management
  dogfood/adversarial-ux-test
  email/agentmail
  finance/3-statement-model, finance/comps-analysis, finance/dcf-model,
  finance/excel-author, finance/lbo-model, finance/merger-model,
  finance/pptx-author
  health/fitness-nutrition, health/neuroskill-bci
  mcp/fastmcp, mcp/mcporter
  migration/openclaw-migration
  mlops/accelerate, mlops/chroma, mlops/clip, mlops/guidance,
  mlops/hermes-atropos-environments, mlops/huggingface-tokenizers,
  mlops/instructor, mlops/lambda-labs, mlops/llava, mlops/modal,
  mlops/peft, mlops/pinecone, mlops/pytorch-lightning, mlops/qdrant,
  mlops/saelens, mlops/simpo, mlops/stable-diffusion
  productivity/canvas, productivity/shop-app, productivity/shopify,
  productivity/siyuan, productivity/telephony
  research/domain-intel, research/drug-discovery, research/duckduckgo-search,
  research/gitnexus-explorer, research/parallel-cli, research/scrapling
  security/1password, security/oss-forensics, security/sherlock
  web-development/page-agent

5 skills gated from Windows (platforms: [linux, macos]):
  mlops/flash-attention   - Flash Attention wheels are Linux-first; Windows
                            install requires building from source with CUDA
  mlops/faiss             - faiss-gpu has no Windows wheel; gate rather than
                            leak partial (faiss-cpu) support
  mlops/nemo-curator      - NVIDIA NeMo ecosystem has no first-class Windows path
  mlops/slime             - Megatron+SGLang RL stack is Linux-only in practice
  mlops/whisper           - openai-whisper + ffmpeg setup on Windows is
                            non-trivial; gate until Windows install stanza lands

Methodology: scanned every SKILL.md for Windows-hostile signals
(apt-get, brew, systemd, osascript, ptrace, X11 binaries, POSIX-only
Python APIs, Docker POSIX $(pwd) bind-mounts, explicit 'linux-only' /
'macos-only' text). 3 skills flagged as having hard signals on review:
docker-management and qdrant only had POSIX $(pwd) docker examples and
the tools themselves (Docker Desktop, Qdrant) run fine on Windows —
declared ALL. whisper had an apt/brew ffmpeg install path and nothing
else but the openai-whisper Windows install story is rough enough to
warrant gating.

Strict-over-lenient policy: when in doubt, gate. Easier to un-gate after
verified Windows support lands than to leak partial support that
manifests as mid-task failures for Windows users.
2026-05-08 14:27:40 -07:00

12 KiB
Raw Blame History

name description version author license dependencies platforms metadata
sparse-autoencoder-training Provides guidance for training and analyzing Sparse Autoencoders (SAEs) using SAELens to decompose neural network activations into interpretable features. Use when discovering interpretable features, analyzing superposition, or studying monosemantic representations in language models. 1.0.0 Orchestra Research MIT
sae-lens>=6.0.0
transformer-lens>=2.0.0
torch>=2.0.0
linux
macos
windows
hermes
tags
Sparse Autoencoders
SAE
Mechanistic Interpretability
Feature Discovery
Superposition

SAELens: Sparse Autoencoders for Mechanistic Interpretability

SAELens is the primary library for training and analyzing Sparse Autoencoders (SAEs) - a technique for decomposing polysemantic neural network activations into sparse, interpretable features. Based on Anthropic's groundbreaking research on monosemanticity.

GitHub: jbloomAus/SAELens (1,100+ stars)

The Problem: Polysemanticity & Superposition

Individual neurons in neural networks are polysemantic - they activate in multiple, semantically distinct contexts. This happens because models use superposition to represent more features than they have neurons, making interpretability difficult.

SAEs solve this by decomposing dense activations into sparse, monosemantic features - typically only a small number of features activate for any given input, and each feature corresponds to an interpretable concept.

When to Use SAELens

Use SAELens when you need to:

  • Discover interpretable features in model activations
  • Understand what concepts a model has learned
  • Study superposition and feature geometry
  • Perform feature-based steering or ablation
  • Analyze safety-relevant features (deception, bias, harmful content)

Consider alternatives when:

  • You need basic activation analysis → Use TransformerLens directly
  • You want causal intervention experiments → Use pyvene or TransformerLens
  • You need production steering → Consider direct activation engineering

Installation

pip install sae-lens

Requirements: Python 3.10+, transformer-lens>=2.0.0

Core Concepts

What SAEs Learn

SAEs are trained to reconstruct model activations through a sparse bottleneck:

Input Activation → Encoder → Sparse Features → Decoder → Reconstructed Activation
    (d_model)       ↓        (d_sae >> d_model)    ↓         (d_model)
                 sparsity                      reconstruction
                 penalty                          loss

Loss Function: MSE(original, reconstructed) + L1_coefficient × L1(features)

Key Validation (Anthropic Research)

In "Towards Monosemanticity", human evaluators found 70% of SAE features genuinely interpretable. Features discovered include:

  • DNA sequences, legal language, HTTP requests
  • Hebrew text, nutrition statements, code syntax
  • Sentiment, named entities, grammatical structures

Workflow 1: Loading and Analyzing Pre-trained SAEs

Step-by-Step

from transformer_lens import HookedTransformer
from sae_lens import SAE

# 1. Load model and pre-trained SAE
model = HookedTransformer.from_pretrained("gpt2-small", device="cuda")
sae, cfg_dict, sparsity = SAE.from_pretrained(
    release="gpt2-small-res-jb",
    sae_id="blocks.8.hook_resid_pre",
    device="cuda"
)

# 2. Get model activations
tokens = model.to_tokens("The capital of France is Paris")
_, cache = model.run_with_cache(tokens)
activations = cache["resid_pre", 8]  # [batch, pos, d_model]

# 3. Encode to SAE features
sae_features = sae.encode(activations)  # [batch, pos, d_sae]
print(f"Active features: {(sae_features > 0).sum()}")

# 4. Find top features for each position
for pos in range(tokens.shape[1]):
    top_features = sae_features[0, pos].topk(5)
    token = model.to_str_tokens(tokens[0, pos:pos+1])[0]
    print(f"Token '{token}': features {top_features.indices.tolist()}")

# 5. Reconstruct activations
reconstructed = sae.decode(sae_features)
reconstruction_error = (activations - reconstructed).norm()

Available Pre-trained SAEs

Release Model Layers
gpt2-small-res-jb GPT-2 Small Multiple residual streams
gemma-2b-res Gemma 2B Residual streams
Various on HuggingFace Search tag saelens Various

Checklist

  • Load model with TransformerLens
  • Load matching SAE for target layer
  • Encode activations to sparse features
  • Identify top-activating features per token
  • Validate reconstruction quality

Workflow 2: Training a Custom SAE

Step-by-Step

from sae_lens import SAE, LanguageModelSAERunnerConfig, SAETrainingRunner

# 1. Configure training
cfg = LanguageModelSAERunnerConfig(
    # Model
    model_name="gpt2-small",
    hook_name="blocks.8.hook_resid_pre",
    hook_layer=8,
    d_in=768,  # Model dimension

    # SAE architecture
    architecture="standard",  # or "gated", "topk"
    d_sae=768 * 8,  # Expansion factor of 8
    activation_fn="relu",

    # Training
    lr=4e-4,
    l1_coefficient=8e-5,  # Sparsity penalty
    l1_warm_up_steps=1000,
    train_batch_size_tokens=4096,
    training_tokens=100_000_000,

    # Data
    dataset_path="monology/pile-uncopyrighted",
    context_size=128,

    # Logging
    log_to_wandb=True,
    wandb_project="sae-training",

    # Checkpointing
    checkpoint_path="checkpoints",
    n_checkpoints=5,
)

# 2. Train
trainer = SAETrainingRunner(cfg)
sae = trainer.run()

# 3. Evaluate
print(f"L0 (avg active features): {trainer.metrics['l0']}")
print(f"CE Loss Recovered: {trainer.metrics['ce_loss_score']}")

Key Hyperparameters

Parameter Typical Value Effect
d_sae 4-16× d_model More features, higher capacity
l1_coefficient 5e-5 to 1e-4 Higher = sparser, less accurate
lr 1e-4 to 1e-3 Standard optimizer LR
l1_warm_up_steps 500-2000 Prevents early feature death

Evaluation Metrics

Metric Target Meaning
L0 50-200 Average active features per token
CE Loss Score 80-95% Cross-entropy recovered vs original
Dead Features <5% Features that never activate
Explained Variance >90% Reconstruction quality

Checklist

  • Choose target layer and hook point
  • Set expansion factor (d_sae = 4-16× d_model)
  • Tune L1 coefficient for desired sparsity
  • Enable L1 warm-up to prevent dead features
  • Monitor metrics during training (W&B)
  • Validate L0 and CE loss recovery
  • Check dead feature ratio

Workflow 3: Feature Analysis and Steering

Analyzing Individual Features

from transformer_lens import HookedTransformer
from sae_lens import SAE
import torch

model = HookedTransformer.from_pretrained("gpt2-small", device="cuda")
sae, _, _ = SAE.from_pretrained(
    release="gpt2-small-res-jb",
    sae_id="blocks.8.hook_resid_pre",
    device="cuda"
)

# Find what activates a specific feature
feature_idx = 1234
test_texts = [
    "The scientist conducted an experiment",
    "I love chocolate cake",
    "The code compiles successfully",
    "Paris is beautiful in spring",
]

for text in test_texts:
    tokens = model.to_tokens(text)
    _, cache = model.run_with_cache(tokens)
    features = sae.encode(cache["resid_pre", 8])
    activation = features[0, :, feature_idx].max().item()
    print(f"{activation:.3f}: {text}")

Feature Steering

def steer_with_feature(model, sae, prompt, feature_idx, strength=5.0):
    """Add SAE feature direction to residual stream."""
    tokens = model.to_tokens(prompt)

    # Get feature direction from decoder
    feature_direction = sae.W_dec[feature_idx]  # [d_model]

    def steering_hook(activation, hook):
        # Add scaled feature direction at all positions
        activation += strength * feature_direction
        return activation

    # Generate with steering
    output = model.generate(
        tokens,
        max_new_tokens=50,
        fwd_hooks=[("blocks.8.hook_resid_pre", steering_hook)]
    )
    return model.to_string(output[0])

Feature Attribution

# Which features most affect a specific output?
tokens = model.to_tokens("The capital of France is")
_, cache = model.run_with_cache(tokens)

# Get features at final position
features = sae.encode(cache["resid_pre", 8])[0, -1]  # [d_sae]

# Get logit attribution per feature
# Feature contribution = feature_activation × decoder_weight × unembedding
W_dec = sae.W_dec  # [d_sae, d_model]
W_U = model.W_U    # [d_model, vocab]

# Contribution to "Paris" logit
paris_token = model.to_single_token(" Paris")
feature_contributions = features * (W_dec @ W_U[:, paris_token])

top_features = feature_contributions.topk(10)
print("Top features for 'Paris' prediction:")
for idx, val in zip(top_features.indices, top_features.values):
    print(f"  Feature {idx.item()}: {val.item():.3f}")

Common Issues & Solutions

Issue: High dead feature ratio

# WRONG: No warm-up, features die early
cfg = LanguageModelSAERunnerConfig(
    l1_coefficient=1e-4,
    l1_warm_up_steps=0,  # Bad!
)

# RIGHT: Warm-up L1 penalty
cfg = LanguageModelSAERunnerConfig(
    l1_coefficient=8e-5,
    l1_warm_up_steps=1000,  # Gradually increase
    use_ghost_grads=True,   # Revive dead features
)

Issue: Poor reconstruction (low CE recovery)

# Reduce sparsity penalty
cfg = LanguageModelSAERunnerConfig(
    l1_coefficient=5e-5,  # Lower = better reconstruction
    d_sae=768 * 16,       # More capacity
)

Issue: Features not interpretable

# Increase sparsity (higher L1)
cfg = LanguageModelSAERunnerConfig(
    l1_coefficient=1e-4,  # Higher = sparser, more interpretable
)
# Or use TopK architecture
cfg = LanguageModelSAERunnerConfig(
    architecture="topk",
    activation_fn_kwargs={"k": 50},  # Exactly 50 active features
)

Issue: Memory errors during training

cfg = LanguageModelSAERunnerConfig(
    train_batch_size_tokens=2048,  # Reduce batch size
    store_batch_size_prompts=4,    # Fewer prompts in buffer
    n_batches_in_buffer=8,         # Smaller activation buffer
)

Integration with Neuronpedia

Browse pre-trained SAE features at neuronpedia.org:

# Features are indexed by SAE ID
# Example: gpt2-small layer 8 feature 1234
# → neuronpedia.org/gpt2-small/8-res-jb/1234

Key Classes Reference

Class Purpose
SAE Sparse Autoencoder model
LanguageModelSAERunnerConfig Training configuration
SAETrainingRunner Training loop manager
ActivationsStore Activation collection and batching
HookedSAETransformer TransformerLens + SAE integration

Reference Documentation

For detailed API documentation, tutorials, and advanced usage, see the references/ folder:

File Contents
references/README.md Overview and quick start guide
references/api.md Complete API reference for SAE, TrainingSAE, configurations
references/tutorials.md Step-by-step tutorials for training, analysis, steering

External Resources

Tutorials

Papers

Official Documentation

SAE Architectures

Architecture Description Use Case
Standard ReLU + L1 penalty General purpose
Gated Learned gating mechanism Better sparsity control
TopK Exactly K active features Consistent sparsity
# TopK SAE (exactly 50 features active)
cfg = LanguageModelSAERunnerConfig(
    architecture="topk",
    activation_fn="topk",
    activation_fn_kwargs={"k": 50},
)