Quantifying reliance on external information over parametric knowledge during Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG) using mechanistic analysis

  • ,
  • Rahul Seetharaman ,
  • Hitesh Wadhwa ,
  • Somyaa Aggarwal ,
  • Samyadeep Basu ,
  • Soundararajan Srinivasan ,
  • Wenlong Zhao ,
  • Shreyas Chaudhari ,
  • Ehsan Aghazadeh

EMNLP 2024, BlackBox NLP workshop |

Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG) is a widely used approach for leveraging external context in several natural language applications such as question answering and information retrieval. Yet, the exact nature in which a Language Model (LM) leverages this nonparametric memory or retrieved context isn’t clearly understood. This paper mechanistically examines the RAG pipeline to highlight that LMs demonstrate a “shortcut” effect and have a strong bias towards utilizing the retrieved context to answer questions, while relying minimally on model priors. We propose (a) Causal Mediation Analysis; for proving that parametric memory is minimally utilized when answering a question and (b) Attention Contributions and Knockouts for showing the last token residual stream do not get enriched from the subject token in the question, but gets enriched from tokens of RAG-context. We find this pronounced “shortcut” behaviour to be true across both LLMs (e.g.,LlaMa) and SLMs (e.g., Phi)