Derives forward and backward propagation-of-chaos bounds for finite vs. infinite-context transformers modeled as contextual flow maps, achieving Wasserstein rate n^{-1/d} generally and n^{-1/2} for transformer-like cases.
Scaling Limits of Long-Context Transformers
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abstract
We study the long-context limit of softmax self-attention with a fixed query and a random context of $n$ i.i.d. keys on the sphere, viewing the inverse temperature $\beta_n$ as the scaling parameter that decides whether attention degenerates into uniform averaging or collapses onto the single closest key. We show that the critical scale at which selectivity emerges is determined by the local exponent of the distance-to-query distribution near zero rather than by global features of the context, and scales like $\beta_n^\ast \asymp n^{2/(d-1)}$ for uniform keys on $\mathbb{S}^{d-1}$. Furthermore, we characterize the limiting laws of the ordered attention weights and of the attention output across all regimes of $\beta_n$: a subcritical regime in which the output reduces to a local average around $q$ with explicit deterministic bias and Gaussian fluctuations; a critical regime in which a finite collection of nearest keys retains macroscopic mass without single-key collapse; and a supercritical regime in which all mass concentrates on the closest key. Of notable interest is the subcritical case with identity value matrix where the attention map approximately implements a backward heat equation.
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cs.LG 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
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Propagation of Chaos in Contextual Flow Maps
Derives forward and backward propagation-of-chaos bounds for finite vs. infinite-context transformers modeled as contextual flow maps, achieving Wasserstein rate n^{-1/d} generally and n^{-1/2} for transformer-like cases.