Attributions All the Way Down? The Metagame of Interpretability
Abstract
We introduce the metagame, a conceptual framework for quantifying second-order interaction effects of model explanations. For any first-order attribution φ(f) explaining a model f, we measure the directional influence of feature j on the attribution of feature i, denoted as meta-attribution j i(f), by treating the attribution method itself as a cooperative game and computing its Shapley value. Theoretically, we prove that attributions hierarchically decompose into meta-attributions, and establish these as directional extensions of existing interaction indices. Empirically, we demonstrate that the metagame delivers insights across diverse interpretability applications: (i) quantifying token interactions in instruction-tuned language models, (ii) explaining cross-modal similarity in vision-language encoders, and (iii) interpreting text-to-image concepts in multimodal diffusion transformers.
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