Huh, that sure seems to work. Interesting.
I wonder if this is an intended feature...
By meta-cognition, in this context I mean "somewhat flexibly deciding what to think about / allocate cognition to in at least some cases". More generally, I meant "this probably shows some type of internal cognitive sophistication of a type you might not have thought LLMs had". I didn't really mean anything very precise or to make a very strong claim. and probably in retrospect, I should have said something other than meta-cognition.
Also, I agree that it could be something else that it is not that interesting and doesn't correspond to "somewhat flexibly deciding what to think about" and isn't well described as very basic metacognition; probably my language was insufficiently caveated.
Recall that without filler, Opus 4.5 performance is 45.2%. I tried the following experiments on Opus 4.5 with filler counting to 300:
So, it seems like the framing doesn't matter ~at all and actually having the filler tokens is the key thing (at least for Opus 4.5, though I strongly expect this would reproduce for Opus 4, Sonnet 4).
Note that repeating the problem X times also works (and yields similar performance increase to filler tokens given the optimal number of repeats/filler). Also yields similar boost across different types of filler (which you'd naively result in different suggestion etc.
I can quickly test this though, will run in one sec.
In my own words: the paper's story seems to involve a lot of symbol/referent confusions of the sort which are prototypical for LLM "alignment" experiments.
To be clear, we don't just ask the model what it would do, we see what actually does in situations that the LLM hopefully "thinks" are real. It could be that our interpretations of motives and beliefs (e.g., " strategically pretend to comply", we think the model mostly thinks the setup is real / isn't a test) is wrong, but the actual output behavior of the model is at least different in a way that it very consistent with this story and this matches with the model's CoT. I agree that "the model says X in the CoT" is limited evidence for X is well described as the AI's belief or reason for taking some action (and there can be something like symbol/referent confusions wiht this). And of could also be that results on current LLMs have very limited transfer to the most concerning AIs. But, despite these likely agreement, I think you are making a stronger claim when you talk about symbol/referent confusions that isn't accurate.
Can you clarify what you mean by meta-cognition?
It requires deciding what to think about at a given token, probably in a somewhat flexible way.
Filler tokens don't allow for serially deeper cognition than what architectural limits allow (n-layers of processing), but they could totally allow for solving a higher fraction of "heavily serial" reasoning tasks [[1]] insofar as the LLM could still benefit from more parallel processing. For instance, the AI might by default be unable to do some serial step within 3 layers but can do that step within 3 layers if it can parallelize this over a bunch of filler tokens. This functionally could allow for more serial depth unless the AI is strongly bottlenecked on serial depth with no way for more layers to help (e.g., the shallowest viable computation graph has depth K and K is greater than the number of layers and the LLM can't do multiple nodes in a single layer [[2]] ).
Paradoxically, xAI might be in a better position as a result of having fewer users, and so they might be able to serve their 6T total param Grok 5 starting early 2026 at a reasonable price.
If compute used for RL is comparable to compute used for inference for GDM and Anthropic, then serving to users might not be that important of a dimension. I guess it could be acceptable to have much slower inference for RL but not for serving to users.
The AIs are obviously fully (or almost fully) automating AI R&D and we're trying to do control evaluations.
Ok, so this works but works less well than I initially thought. The model will still reason even with a prefil, just at some low rate. And, this rate depends on the prompt (sometimes the rate of reasoning massively spikes for some prompt change). I find that it is much less likely to reason with a 20 shot prompt than with a 5 shot prompt in my setup. I also worry that this prompt is now very OOD and thus is getting worse performance, but probably this is fine.
(Aside: It's very strange that the model is even allowed to respond without reasoning (but doesn't do so consistently???) when reasoning is enabled but we are still forced to enable reasoning for these models.)
Regardless, this does let me get results for Gemini 2.5 Pro and Gemini 3 Pro in a less insane way (I consider the model incorrect if it reasoned and do up to 5 retries to find a response without retries). I find that both models benefit from repeats/filler. At repeats=5, Gemini 3 Pro has a time horizon of 3.8 minutes while Gemini 2.5 Pro has a time horizon of 2.7 minutes. (Without repeats, the time horizons are 2.8 minutes and 1.9 minutes respectively.)
(Note that I'm considering the release date of 2.5 pro to be 2025/06/17 even though an experimental version was released on 2025/03/25; the model looks substantially above trend if you use the experimental release version, though plausibly this version is worse than the one I'm testing.)