What Are You Sinking? a Geometric Approach on Attention Sink

Abstract

Attention sink (AS) is a consistent pattern in transformer attention maps where certain tokens (often special tokens or positional anchors) disproportionately attract attention from other tokens. We show that in transformers, AS is not an architectural artifact, but it is the manifestation of a fundamental geometric principle: the establishment of reference frames that anchor representational spaces. We analyze several architectures and identify three distinct reference frame types, centralized, distributed, and bidirectional, that correlate with the attention sink phenomenon. We show that they emerge during the earliest stages of training as optimal solutions to the problem of establishing stable coordinate systems in high-dimensional spaces. We show the influence of architecture components, particularly position encoding implementations, on the specific type of reference frame. This perspective transforms our understanding of transformer attention mechanisms and provides insights for both architecture design and the relationship with AS.

Cite

Text

Ruscio et al. "What Are You Sinking? a Geometric Approach on Attention Sink." Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems, 2025.

Markdown

[Ruscio et al. "What Are You Sinking? a Geometric Approach on Attention Sink." Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems, 2025.](https://mlanthology.org/neurips/2025/ruscio2025neurips-you/)

BibTeX

@inproceedings{ruscio2025neurips-you,
  title     = {{What Are You Sinking? a Geometric Approach on Attention Sink}},
  author    = {Ruscio, Valeria and Nanni, Umberto and Silvestri, Fabrizio},
  booktitle = {Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems},
  year      = {2025},
  url       = {https://mlanthology.org/neurips/2025/ruscio2025neurips-you/}
}