ToMMeR -- Efficient Entity Mention Detection from Large Language Models
Abstract
Identifying which text spans refer to entities - mention detection - is both foundational for information extraction and a known performance bottleneck. We introduce ToMMeR, a lightweight model (<300K parameters) probing mention detection capabilities from early LLM layers. Across 13 NER benchmarks, ToMMeR achieves 93% recall zero-shot, with an estimated 90% precision under a human-calibrated LLM-judge protocol, showing that ToMMeR rarely produces spurious predictions despite high recall. Cross-model analysis reveals that diverse architectures (14M-15B parameters) converge on similar mention boundaries (DICE >75%), confirming that mention detection emerges naturally from language modeling. When extended with span classification heads, ToMMeR achieves competitive NER performance (80-87% F1 on standard benchmarks). Our work provides evidence that structured entity representations exist in early transformer layers and can be efficiently recovered with minimal parameters.
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