Unpredictability dissociates from structured control in language agents
Xiao Jia

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that stochastic sampling cannot replicate the structured control mechanisms in language agents, emphasizing the importance of explicit control components for predictable behavior.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence that unpredictability from stochastic methods does not substitute for structured control in language agents, validated across multiple datasets and models.
Findings
Structured control maintains stronger action coupling than stochastic methods.
Lesions reducing reasoning and veto functions decrease structured control.
Stochastic sampling fails to reproduce structured, action-coupled control.
Abstract
Unpredictable behavior is often taken as evidence of control, yet stochastic dispersion and structured action control need not coincide. This paper tests whether stochastic sampling can substitute for structured mechanisms that couple reasons, memory, self-state and inhibition to action selection in a language-agent implementation whose control components can be selectively disabled. In a seven-dataset baseline lesion matrix comprising 74,352 calls, the high-stochasticity comparator was more unpredictable than the structured-control variant in 7/7 datasets, whereas targeted reason and veto lesions reduced the expected structured-control profiles in 7/7 datasets each. In a matched-interface control spanning 26,946 generations, the structured agent maintained stronger action-field coupling than all stochastic, post-hoc, scrambled and verbosity controls across every dataset. The primary…
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