The Curse of Superposition: Why LLMs are Black Boxes Large Language Models like Google’s Gemma are incredibly powerful, but they suffer from a phenomenon known as Superposition . Neural networks naturally want to represent more concepts than they have mathematical dimensions. To accomplish this, they pack multiple unrelated concepts into the same neurons—a property called polysemanticity . When Gemma processes the word "Paris," it doesn't activate a neat, dedicated "City" neuron. Instead, it fires a dense, entangled vector of floating-point numbers in a 2,304-dimensional space that simultaneously represents "France," "capital," "tourism," and "linguistics." For researchers trying to build safer, steerable AI, this is a massive problem. How do we debug an AI if its internal thoughts are entangled in a dense manifold? The state-of-the-art solution is Mechanistic Interpretability via Sparse Autoencoders (SAEs...
A complete, opinionated recipe for adapting Gemma 4 E2B to your domain — from multimodal dataset construction and QLoRA configuration through training loop debugging, evaluation, and production deployment. April 2026 · ~28 min read · HuggingFace / TRL / PEFT Recipe at a Glance Serves: 1 fine-tuned model Ingredients (hardware) NVIDIA GPU ≥ 24 GB VRAM System RAM ≥ 32 GB Storage (SSD) ≥ 50 GB free Training dataset 1K–100K samples Python ≥ 3.11 CUDA ≥ 12.1 Ingredients (libraries) transformers ≥ 4.51 peft ≥ 0.12 trl ≥ 0.12 bitsandbytes ≥ 0.44 accelerate ≥ 0.34 wandb / mlflow any Contents 01. Why Fine-Tune E2B? 02. Dataset Construction 03. QLoRA Configuration 04. Multimodal Fine-Tuning 05. The Training Loop 06. Debugging ...