Researcher profile

Leander Girrbach

Leander Girrbach contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Do LLMs Experience an Internal Polylogue? Investigating Reasoning through the Lens of Personas

Recent work shows that large language models (LLMs) encode behavioural traits ("personas") as linear directions in activation space, often called "persona vectors". Prior work has used such directions as static handles for behavioural steering. Building on this, we treat them as dynamic signals instead: probes we can monitor and intervene on as reasoning unfolds. We use the term polylogue to denote the time series of alignments between persona vectors and hidden activations over the course of generation. Experiments across four open-weight models show that polylogue features predict correctness on MMLU-Pro competitively with low-dimensional activation baselines, while remaining interpretable through their associated persona directions. They also suggest concrete steering targets, namely which latent directions to modulate at different stages of a response. We instantiate this as a simple paragraph-conditioned intervention that improves accuracy on three of four models, pointing to stage-aware latent steering as a promising direction for reasoning-time control. Together, this positions the polylogue as an interpretable tool for reasoning-time monitoring and intervention.

preprint2022arXiv

Word Segmentation and Morphological Parsing for Sanskrit

We describe our participation in the Word Segmentation and Morphological Parsing (WSMP) for Sanskrit hackathon. We approach the word segmentation task as a sequence labelling task by predicting edit operations from which segmentations are derived. We approach the morphological analysis task by predicting morphological tags and rules that transform inflected words into their corresponding stems. Also, we propose an end-to-end trainable pipeline model for joint segmentation and morphological analysis. Our model performed best in the joint segmentation and analysis subtask (80.018 F1 score) and performed second best in the individual subtasks (segmentation: 96.189 F1 score / analysis: 69.180 F1 score). Finally, we analyse errors made by our models and suggest future work and possible improvements regarding data and evaluation.