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\section*{Two Feed-Forward Layers = Attention over Parameters}\label{sec:parameter_attention}
In addition to attention layers, our model contains position-wise feed-forward networks (Section \ref{sec:ffn}), which consist of two linear transformations with a ReLU activation in between. In fact, these networks too can be seen as a form of attention. Compare the formula for such a network with the formula for a simple dot-product attention layer (biases and scaling factors omitted):
\begin{align*}
FFN(x, W_1, W_2) = ReLU(xW_1)W_2 \\
A(q, K, V) = Softmax(qK^T)V
\end{align*}
Based on the similarity of these formulae, the two-layer feed-forward network can be seen as a kind of attention, where the keys and values are the rows of the trainable parameter matrices $W_1$ and $W_2$, and where we use ReLU instead of Softmax in the compatibility function.
%the compatablity function is $compat(q, k_i) = ReLU(q \cdot k_i)$ instead of $Softmax(qK_T)_i$.
Given this similarity, we experimented with replacing the position-wise feed-forward networks with attention layers similar to the ones we use everywhere else our model. The multi-head-attention-over-parameters sublayer is identical to the multi-head attention described in \ref{sec:multihead}, except that the "keys" and "values" inputs to each attention head are trainable model parameters, as opposed to being linear projections of a previous layer. These parameters are scaled up by a factor of $\sqrt{d_{model}}$ in order to be more similar to activations.
In our first experiment, we replaced each position-wise feed-forward network with a multi-head-attention-over-parameters sublayer with $h_p=8$ heads, key-dimensionality $d_{pk}=64$, and value-dimensionality $d_{pv}=64$, using $n_p=1536$ key-value pairs for each attention head. The sublayer has a total of $2097152$ parameters, including the parameters in the query projection and the output projection. This matches the number of parameters in the position-wise feed-forward network that we replaced. While the theoretical amount of computation is also the same, in practice, the attention version caused the step times to be about 30\% longer.
In our second experiment, we used $h_p=8$ heads, and $n_p=512$ key-value pairs for each attention head, again matching the total number of parameters in the base model.
Results for the first experiment were slightly worse than for the base model, and results for the second experiment were slightly better, see Table~\ref{tab:parameter_attention}.
\begin{table}[h]
\caption{Replacing the position-wise feed-forward networks with multihead-attention-over-parameters produces similar results to the base model. All metrics are on the English-to-German translation development set, newstest2013.}
\label{tab:parameter_attention}
\begin{center}
\vspace{-2mm}
%\scalebox{1.0}{
\begin{tabular}{c|cccccc|cccc}
\hline\rule{0pt}{2.0ex}
& \multirow{2}{*}{$\dmodel$} & \multirow{2}{*}{$\dff$} &
\multirow{2}{*}{$h_p$} & \multirow{2}{*}{$d_{pk}$} & \multirow{2}{*}{$d_{pv}$} &
\multirow{2}{*}{$n_p$} &
PPL & BLEU & params & training\\
& & & & & & & (dev) & (dev) & $\times10^6$ & time \\
\hline\rule{0pt}{2.0ex}
base & 512 & 2048 & & & & & 4.92 & 25.8 & 65 & 12 hours\\
\hline\rule{0pt}{2.0ex}
AOP$_1$ & 512 & & 8 & 64 & 64 & 1536 & 4.92& 25.5 & 65 & 16 hours\\
AOP$_2$ & 512 & & 16 & 64 & 64 & 512 & \textbf{4.86} & \textbf{25.9} & 65 & 16 hours \\
\hline
\end{tabular}
%}
\end{center}
\end{table}
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