Monitoring Monitorability
Melody Y. Guan, Miles Wang, Micah Carroll, Zehao Dou, Annie Y. Wei, Marcus Williams, Benjamin Arnav, Joost Huizinga, Ian Kivlichan, Mia Glaese, Jakub Pachocki, Bowen Baker

TL;DR
This paper introduces new evaluation methods and metrics for assessing the monitorability of AI systems' reasoning processes, demonstrating how various factors influence the ability to effectively monitor complex models.
Contribution
It proposes three evaluation archetypes and a novel monitorability metric, providing a comprehensive suite to measure and improve AI system monitorability across different settings.
Findings
Longer CoTs generally increase monitorability.
RL optimization does not significantly reduce monitorability.
Scaling weak monitors with stronger agents improves overall monitorability.
Abstract
Observability into the decision making of modern AI systems may be required to safely deploy increasingly capable agents. Monitoring the chain-of-thought (CoT) of today's reasoning models has proven effective for detecting misbehavior. However, this "monitorability" may be fragile under different training procedures, data sources, or even continued system scaling. To measure and track monitorability, we propose three evaluation archetypes (intervention, process, and outcome-property) and a new monitorability metric, and introduce a broad evaluation suite. We demonstrate that these evaluations can catch simple model organisms trained to have obfuscated CoTs, and that CoT monitoring is more effective than action-only monitoring in practical settings. We compare the monitorability of various frontier models and find that most models are fairly, but not perfectly, monitorable. We also…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsReinforcement Learning in Robotics · Adversarial Robustness in Machine Learning · Explainable Artificial Intelligence (XAI)
