Guess or Recall? Training CNNs to Classify and Localize Memorization in LLMs

Authors

  • Jérémie Dentan LIX (École Polytechnique, IP Paris, CNRS)
  • Davide Buscaldi LIX (École Polytechnique, IP Paris, CNRS) LIPN (Université Sorbonne Paris Nord)
  • Sonia Vanier LIX (École Polytechnique, IP Paris, CNRS)

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v40i36.40304

Abstract

Verbatim memorization in Large Language Models (LLMs) is a multifaceted phenomenon involving distinct underlying mechanisms. We introduce a novel method to analyze the different forms of memorization described by the existing taxonomy. Specifically, we train Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) on the attention weights of the LLM and evaluate the alignment between this taxonomy and the attention weights involved in decoding. We find that the existing taxonomy performs poorly and fails to reflect distinct mechanisms within the attention blocks. We propose a new taxonomy that maximizes alignment with the attention weights, consisting of three categories: memorized samples that are guessed using language modeling abilities, memorized samples that are recalled due to high duplication in the training set, and non-memorized samples. Our results reveal that few-shot verbatim memorization does not correspond to a distinct attention mechanism. We also show that a significant proportion of extractable samples are in fact guessed by the model and should therefore be studied separately. Finally, we develop a custom visual interpretability technique to localize the regions of the attention weights involved in each form of memorization.

Published

2026-03-14

How to Cite

Dentan, J., Buscaldi, D., & Vanier, S. (2026). Guess or Recall? Training CNNs to Classify and Localize Memorization in LLMs. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 40(36), 30503-30511. https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v40i36.40304

Issue

Section

AAAI Technical Track on Natural Language Processing I