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Beyond Linear Probes: Dynamic Safety Monitoring for Language Models

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abstract

Monitoring large language models' (LLMs) activations is an effective way to detect harmful requests before they lead to unsafe outputs. However, traditional safety monitors often require the same amount of compute for every query. This creates a trade-off: expensive monitors waste resources on easy inputs, while cheap ones risk missing subtle cases. We argue that safety monitors should be flexible--costs should rise only when inputs are difficult to assess, or when more compute is available. To achieve this, we introduce Truncated Polynomial Classifiers (TPCs), a natural extension of linear probes for dynamic activation monitoring. Our key insight is that polynomials can be trained and evaluated progressively, term-by-term. At test-time, one can early-stop for lightweight monitoring, or use more terms for stronger guardrails when needed. TPCs provide two modes of use. First, as a safety dial: by evaluating more terms, developers and regulators can "buy" stronger guardrails from the same model. Second, as an adaptive cascade: clear cases exit early after low-order checks, and higher-order guardrails are evaluated only for ambiguous inputs, reducing overall monitoring costs. On WildGuardMix, across 4 models with up to 30B parameters, we show that TPCs compete with or outperform MLP-based probe baselines of the same size for harmful prompt classification, all the while being more interpretable than their black-box counterparts. Our code is available at http://github.com/james-oldfield/tpc.

fields

cs.LG 1

years

2026 1

verdicts

UNVERDICTED 1

representative citing papers

From Mechanistic to Compositional Interpretability

cs.LG · 2026-05-09 · unverdicted · novelty 7.0

Compositional interpretability defines explanations as commuting syntactic-semantic mapping pairs grounded in compositionality and minimum description length, with compressive refinement and a parsimony theorem guaranteeing concise human-aligned decompositions.

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  • From Mechanistic to Compositional Interpretability cs.LG · 2026-05-09 · unverdicted · none · ref 150 · internal anchor

    Compositional interpretability defines explanations as commuting syntactic-semantic mapping pairs grounded in compositionality and minimum description length, with compressive refinement and a parsimony theorem guaranteeing concise human-aligned decompositions.