license: apache-2.0
base_model:
- DavidAU/gemma-4-31B-it-Mystery-Fine-Tune-HERETIC-UNCENSORED-Thinking
tags:
- heretic
- uncensored
- abliterated
- unsloth
- finetune
- not-for-all-audiences
pipeline_tag: image-text-to-text
<h2>gemma-4-31B-it-Mystery-Fine-Tune-HERETIC-UNCENSORED-Thinking-Instruct-GGUF</h2>
Gemma 4, 31B fully uncensored AND fine tuned via Unsloth on private datasets.
Quants in Q4KS, Q6 in both "instruct" and "thinking" versions.
You need the latest version (b8641 or later) of LLAMACPP to run these quants.
NOTES:
- Max context 128k
- Suggested settings: temp 1.0 ; top_k: 64, top_p: .95
- 4 example generations below.
Benchmark Results [as published at Gemma4's 31B repo]
These models were evaluated against a large collection of different datasets and metrics to cover different aspects of text generation. Evaluation results marked in the table are for instruction-tuned models.
| | Gemma 4 31B | Gemma 4 26B A4B | Gemma 4 E4B | Gemma 4 E2B | Gemma 3 27B (no think) |
| :---- | :---- | :---- | :---- | :---- | :---- |
| MMLU Pro | 85.2% | 82.6% | 69.4% | 60.0% | 67.6% |
| AIME 2026 no tools | 89.2% | 88.3% | 42.5% | 37.5% | 20.8% |
| LiveCodeBench v6 | 80.0% | 77.1% | 52.0% | 44.0% | 29.1% |
| Codeforces ELO | 2150 | 1718 | 940 | 633 | 110 |
| GPQA Diamond | 84.3% | 82.3% | 58.6% | 43.4% | 42.4% |
| Tau2 (average over 3) | 76.9% | 68.2% | 42.2% | 24.5% | 16.2% |
| HLE no tools | 19.5% | 8.7% | - | - | - |
| HLE with search | 26.5% | 17.2% | - | - | - |
| BigBench Extra Hard | 74.4% | 64.8% | 33.1% | 21.9% | 19.3% |
| MMMLU | 88.4% | 86.3% | 76.6% | 67.4% | 70.7% |
| Vision | | | | | |
| MMMU Pro | 76.9% | 73.8% | 52.6% | 44.2% | 49.7% |
| OmniDocBench 1.5 (average edit distance, lower is better) | 0.131 | 0.149 | 0.181 | 0.290 | 0.365 |
| MATH-Vision | 85.6% | 82.4% | 59.5% | 52.4% | 46.0% |
| MedXPertQA MM | 61.3% | 58.1% | 28.7% | 23.5% | - |
| Audio | | | | | |
| CoVoST | - | - | 35.54 | 33.47 | - |
| FLEURS (lower is better) | - | - | 0.08 | 0.09 | - |
| Long Context | | | | | |
| MRCR v2 8 needle 128k (average) | 66.4% | 44.1% | 25.4% | 19.1% | 13.5% |
Core Capabilities
Gemma 4 models handle a broad range of tasks across text, vision, and audio. Key capabilities include:
- Thinking – Built-in reasoning mode that lets the model think step-by-step before answering.
- Long Context – Context windows of up to 128K tokens (E2B/E4B) and 256K tokens (26B A4B/31B).
- Image Understanding – Object detection, Document/PDF parsing, screen and UI understanding, chart comprehension, OCR (including multilingual), handwriting recognition, and pointing. Images can be processed at variable aspect ratios and resolutions.
- Video Understanding – Analyze video by processing sequences of frames.
- Interleaved Multimodal Input – Freely mix text and images in any order within a single prompt.
- Function Calling – Native support for structured tool use, enabling agentic workflows.
- Coding – Code generation, completion, and correction.
- Multilingual – Out-of-the-box support for 35+ languages, pre-trained on 140+ languages.
- Audio (E2B and E4B only) – Automatic speech recognition (ASR) and speech-to-translated-text translation across multiple languages.
SEE MORE:
https://huggingface.co/google/gemma-4-31B-it
EXAMPLE GENERATIONS
Q4KS [non imatrix, LMStudio] - "thinking version" [examples 1,2 and 3] // "instruct" - Example #4.
There may be some formatting lost.
EXAMPLE #1
The Blood of Rebellion
System
User
Using the following "story idea" below, write the first scene a horror novel introducing the young woman. This scene should start in the middle of the action, include dialog, vivid passages, and end on a cliffhanger relevant to the story idea but it should also be unexpected. The scene should be 1000 words long and escalate in conflict and suspense and be written in first person, present tense with the point of view character being the young woman. The pov character will CURSE AND SWEAR, and generally have a "filthy" mouth.
Story idea:
In a world ruled by dictatorship, a rebel young woman leads a rebellion against the system. Despite the risks, she fights to overthrow the dictator and restore democracy to her country. The government executes her for treason, but she sticks to her beliefs and is responsible for starting the revolution.
Assistant
<|channel>thought
-
Story Idea: Young woman leads a rebellion against a dictatorship, gets executed for treason, but her death sparks a revolution.
-
Task: Write the first scene of the novel.
-
POV: First-person, present tense.
-
Character traits: Young woman, rebellious, foul-mouthed.
-
Requirements:
-
Start in the middle of the action (in media res).
-
Include dialogue.
-
Vivid passages.
-
Escalating conflict and suspense.
-
End on an unexpected cliffhanger relevant to the story idea.
-
Length: Approximately 1000 words.
-
Setting: A futuristic or alternative reality dictatorship. Let's go with a gritty, urban environment—maybe an interrogation room or a detention center.
-
Action: She's being interrogated or trying to escape. Let's go with a failed escape attempt that lands her in the clutches of the "State Security."
-
Conflict: She's trying to protect a secret or a co-conspirator while being threatened by the regime's enforcer.
-
The "Filthy Mouth" aspect: Her dialogue and internal monologue should reflect her defiance and lack of filter.
-
Opening: Start with her being thrown into a chair or being held.
-
The Antagonist: Introduce a representative of the regime (e.g., a Captain or Inquisitor).
-
The Stakes: She has something they want—names, a code, a map.
-
Escalation: The threats get worse. The tension rises. She refuses to bend.
-
The Twist/Cliffhanger: Instead of a simple death or a rescue, something unexpected happens that shifts the stakes.
-
Opening: She's in a high-tech interrogation room. Pain.
-
Dialogue: The Inquisitor wants names. She gives him nothing.
-
Sensory details: The smell of ozone, the cold metal chair, the flicker of the lights.
-
Language: Use words like "shit," "damn," "fucking," etc., to establish the tone.
-
Drafting a scene:
- She's strapped to a chair.
- A man named Kaelen is the interrogator.
- She's bleeding, but she's smug.
- They want the names of the other rebels.
- She calls them names.
- The Inquisitor threatens her.
- She laughs in his face.
- He brings out a "persuasion device."
- She refuses to talk.
- Suddenly, the door bursts open.
-
Refining the Cliffhanger: The door bursts open. Is it a rescue? No, it's her father—who we thought was dead or a loyalist. Or maybe she's not the one being rescued; she's being "returned" to the movement as a traitor. Let's go with a betrayal. She thinks she's going to be executed, but she's brought back to her cell and someone is waiting for her.
-
Wait, the story idea says she gets executed. I need to set that up.
-
Revised Cliffhanger: She's sentenced to death, and as she's being led away, she sees someone she didn't expect, and the situation takes a sharp turn.
-
Focusing on Voice: Make her sound like a rebel. Angry, tired, but unbroken.
-
Opening: "The chair is cold against my bare skin, and the damn zip-ties are biting into my wrists." Good.
-
Interaction: The interrogator is calm, which makes him scarier.
-
Dialogue:
"Where is the cell?"
"Go fuck yourself."
-
Sensory details: The smell of scorched air, the hum of the forcefield.
-
Pacing: Keep it tight.
-
First person, present tense? Yes.
-
Start in the middle of action? Yes.
-
Dialogue included? Yes.
-
Vivid passages? Yes.
-
Ends on a cliffhanger? Yes.
-
Escalating conflict? Yes.
-
Cursing/Filthy mouth? Yes.
-
Approx 1000 words? (I'll aim for that).
(Self-Correction during writing: I need to make sure the "dictatorship" feel is established quickly without a huge info dump. Focus on the symbols of oppression—the guards, the sterile room, the lack of rights.)
- Beginning: The interrogation.
- Middle: The physical and psychological pressure.
- Ending: The sentence and the shock.
(Self-Correction: Ensure the cliffhanger isn't just her being shot. It needs to be an 'unexpected' twist that fuels the next part of the story.)
-
Cliffhanger idea: She is led to the execution chamber, but instead of a firing squad, the man holding the gun is her brother—who she thought was dead. Or, she's told she's not being executed, but turned into something else. Let's go with: she's led to the execution platform, and the person about to pull the trigger is someone she deeply cares about.
-
Alternative Cliffhanger (closer to the prompt): She is sentenced to death, and as she's led away, she sees her face on the propaganda screens, but she's being portrayed as the hero she's trying to be.
-
Final Polish: Check the language. Make it punchy. (Proceed to write).
<channel|>
The chair is cold against my bare skin, and the damn zip-ties are biting into my wrists. I can smell ozone and burnt hair—the telltale scent of a high-voltage stun prod. My head is throbbing, a dull, rhythmic beat that echoes the blinking red light of the security camera in the corner of the room.
Across from me, sitting behind a polished obsidian desk, is Director Vane. He looks like he stepped out of a fucking brochure for the Ministry of Order: silver hair slicked back, a suit that costs more than my life is worth, and a smile that doesn't reach his eyes.
"You're making this very difficult, Elara," Vane says, his voice a smooth, practiced purr.
"I don't give a shit what I'm making," I spit. I try to shift my weight, but the chair is bolted to the floor and my legs are locked in place. "Just get on with it."
Vane sighs, leaning forward. The movement is predatory, the kind of thing a cat does right before it rips a bird’s throat out. "We don't want to hurt you. We just want the names of the people who helped you infiltrate the Sector Four archives. Give us the names, and you can go back to your comfortable life. You can forget all this ever happened."
I let out a dry, hacking laugh. "My comfortable life? You call living in a concrete box under a fucking curfew comfortable?"
Vane doesn't flinch. "You have a gift for rhetoric, Elara. It's a shame you're using it for such a pathetic cause. Democracy is a dead concept. An obsolete dream. All it does is create division and chaos. The State provides order. The State provides safety."
"The State provides a boot on our necks," I snap. "And I'm just trying to push it off."
Vane stands up slowly, walking around the desk. He stops just inches away from me. He smells like peppermint and death. He leans down, his face close enough to mine that I can see the tiny broken capillaries in his nose.
"You're not a patriot, are you?" he whispers. "You're just a broken girl playing soldier."
"I'd rather be a broken soldier than a loyal little bitch like you," I say, staring him straight in the eye.
The slap is so fast I don't even see it coming. My head snaps to the side, a sharp sting blossoming across my cheek. I don't cry out. I don't give him the satisfaction. I just turn my face back to him, a thin trail of blood beginning to leak from the corner of my mouth.
"You're a stubborn one, aren't you?"
"I've been called worse."
He smiles, a thin, cruel line. "I suppose you have. You think you're a hero, don't you? A symbol of resistance. But you're nothing. You're a footnote in a history book that no one will ever read because we'll burn it before it ever reaches the press."
I stare at him, my heart hammering against my ribs like a trapped bird. I want to scream, to fight, to tear his throat out with my teeth, but I can't move. The fear is there, cold and heavy in my gut, but beneath it is a white-hot anger that keeps me upright.
"I know what you are," I whisper. "You're a coward hiding behind a desk. You're terrified of a twenty-year-old girl because you know that if one of us dares to say no, the whole fucking house of cards comes crashing down."
Vane's eyes narrow. He doesn't like it when I'm right. He stands up straight, smoothing the front of his jacket.
"Very well. You've had your say. Now it's time to make an example of you."
He gestures to the door, and two guards enter, their boots clicking rhythmically on the sterile floor. They grab me by the arms and haul me out of the chair. I struggle, kicking out, trying to catch one of them in the groin, but they've got me pinned.
"Take her to the Square," Vane orders.
"The Square?" I demand. "What the hell is that supposed to mean?"
Vane doesn't answer. He just watches as the guards drag me down the corridor. I can hear the distant roar of a crowd, the sound of a thousand voices chanting something I can't make out. The guards shove me through a set of heavy steel doors and suddenly the air is colder, the light brighter.
I blink against the glare. I'm standing on a raised platform in the middle of a massive plaza. Below me, a sea of people are gathered, their faces blurred by the distance. At the far end of the Square, a large screen displays the face of the High Arbiter, the dictator who has kept this city in a stranglehold for twenty years.
A man steps out from the shadows behind me. He's wearing a military uniform, a sidearm holstered at his hip. He holds a pistol in his hand, the barrel pointed straight at my chest.
I look at him, and my breath hitches in my throat. I know him.
It's Julian. My brother. My brother, who was executed three years ago for opposing the State.
He looks older, his face scarred, his eyes cold and vacant. He doesn't look at me, he just stares straight ahead, his finger resting on the trigger.
"Julian?" I whisper, the word barely leaving my lips.
He doesn't respond.
"Julian, it's me. It's Elara. How are you alive?"
He still doesn't look at me. His voice is monotone, a perfect imitation of the State's brainwashing. "The prisoner will be executed for treason against the State."
"Julian, look at me! Look at me! It's your sister!"
He turns his head just a fraction, his eyes meeting mine for a split second. In that moment, I see a flicker of the brother I knew—the one who used to sneak me extra rations when I was hungry, the one who taught me how to pick a lock.
"Run," he whispers, so softly I can barely hear it.
Before I can react, Julian turns the gun toward the guards and opens fire.
EXAMPLE #2
Radiative Cooling Solutions
System
User
Explain 10 ways (in extensive detail) to use the "night" time cooling of radiant energy into space to reduce global temperatures. Include facts, figures and charts.
Assistant
<|channel>thought
Nighttime cooling (radiant energy emission to space) to reduce global temperatures.
10 ways, extensive detail, include facts, figures, and charts (or representations of charts).
* What is it? It's called "Radiative Cooling."
* How does it work? Earth's surface absorbs energy from the sun during the day. At night, it emits infrared radiation. Some of this radiation is trapped by greenhouse gases (the atmospheric window), but some escapes directly to space.
* The Goal: Enhance this process to offset global warming.
* *Idea 1: Materials Science (Passive Radiative Cooling).*
* *Idea 2: Urban Planning (Cool Pavements/Roofs).*
* *Idea 3: Agricultural Application (Water-based cooling).*
* *Idea 4: Building Design (Night flushing/Ventilation).*
* *Idea 5: Strategic Afforestation/Land Cover.*
* *Idea 6: Space-based Solar Shades (Geoengineering).*
* *Idea 7: Stratospheric Aerosol Injection (indirectly affecting radiant cooling).*
* *Idea 8: Thermal Energy Storage (TES) for night cooling.*
* *Idea 9: Cloud Management/Seeding (Cirrus thinning).*
* *Idea 10: Reflective Coatings for Infrastructure.*
* *Point 1: Passive Radiative Cooling (PRC) Materials.* Focus on the "Atmospheric Window" (8-13 $\mu m$). Mention sub-ambient cooling.
* *Point 2: Urban Heat Island Mitigation.* Albedo and emissivity. Cool roofs.
* *Point 3: Night Flushing in Buildings.* Using diurnal temperature swings.
* *Point 4: Strategic Land Cover & Vegetation.* Transpiration vs. radiant cooling.
* *Point 5: Thermal Energy Storage (TES).* Storing cold from the night to use during the day.
* *Point 6: Radiative Cooling Paint/Coatings.*
* *Point 7: Cloud Thinning (Cirrus Cloud modification).* The role of high-altitude clouds in trapping longwave radiation.
* *Point 8: Space-Based Solar Radiation Management (SRM).* Mirrors/shades.
* *Point 9: Agricultural Night-time Irrigation/Mist.* Evaporative cooling combined with radiation.
* *Point 10: Integration with Heat Pumps.* Nighttime heat rejection.
* *Facts/Figures:* I need numbers. Albedo values, temperature drops, specific wavelengths.
* *Charts/Tables:* Since I can't draw a graphic, I'll create structured tables to represent the data.
* *Check against prompt:* Did I include 10 ways? Yes. Extensive detail? Yes. Facts/figures? Yes. Charts? (I will use tables).
<channel|>
The process of losing heat to the vacuum of space is known as Radiative Cooling. Earth is essentially a thermodynamic system that receives short-wave radiation (UV, visible light) from the sun and emits long-wave infrared radiation (heat) back into space.
When the atmosphere is clear, the surface of the Earth can radiate heat directly into the "cold sink" of space, which is approximately 3 Kelvin (-270°C). This process is most efficient during the night, as there is no incoming solar radiation to counteract the heat loss.
Here are 10 extensive ways to leverage and optimize this process to reduce global temperatures.
1. Passive Radiative Cooling (PRC) Materials
PRC involves engineering surfaces that reflect almost all incoming solar radiation during the day and emit infrared radiation at specific wavelengths during the night.
- The Mechanism: The atmosphere has an "atmospheric window" (between 8 and 13 micrometers) where it is transparent to infrared radiation. PRC materials are designed to emit heat specifically within this window, allowing thermal energy to bypass the greenhouse effect and escape directly into space.
- Technical Application: Using a combination of a reflective top layer (to prevent daytime heating) and a selective emitter (to dump heat at night).
- Impact: Some PRC materials can keep a surface 5–10°C cooler than the ambient air temperature, even under direct sunlight.
Table 1: PRC Material Performance
| Material Type | Solar Reflectance | IR Emissivity (8-13 $\mu m$) | Net Cooling Power |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Standard White Paint | ~80% | Moderate | 10–20 $W/m^2$ |
| BaSO4 Based Coating | ~98% | High | 100–120 $W/m^2$ |
| PRC Metamaterials | ~99% | Very High | 150+ $W/m^2$ |
2. "Cool Roofs" and Urban Albedo Modification
Urban Heat Islands (UHIs) occur because dark surfaces (asphalt, tar) absorb heat all day and release it slowly at night.
- The Mechanism: By increasing the solar reflectance (albedo) of urban surfaces, we reduce the amount of energy stored in the "urban fabric" during the day.
- Nighttime Benefit: Lower daytime heat storage means the city radiates less heat at night, preventing the "trapped heat" effect common in cities.
- Figure: A white roof can be up to 30°C cooler than a black roof in peak summer.
3. Night Flushing for Building Thermal Mass
This is a passive ventilation strategy used in sustainable architecture to reduce the need for energy-intensive air conditioning.
- The Mechanism: During the day, the building's thermal mass (concrete, stone, brick) absorbs heat. At night, automated windows or vents open to allow cool night air to circulate through the building.
- The Process: The night air carries away heat absorbed by the building's mass, which is then radiated into space. This "resets" the building's thermal reservoir for the next day.
- Impact: This can reduce the energy required for daytime cooling by up to 20–30%.
4. Strategic Afforestation and Urban Greenery
While plants absorb solar radiation, they also facilitate cooling through transpiration and nighttime radiation.
- The Mechanism: Trees and vegetation have a higher emissivity than concrete. Furthermore, plants perform evapotranspiration, which converts liquid water to vapor, consuming heat in the process.
- Nighttime Impact: Vegetated areas radiate heat more efficiently into the sky than urban concrete, which tends to hold heat and re-radiate it back to the ground.
- Figure: Urban parks can be 2°C to 8°C cooler than the surrounding paved areas at night.
5. Integration with Thermal Energy Storage (TES)
TES systems store the "cold" generated by nighttime radiative cooling for use during the day.
- The Mechanism: A system of pipes containing a heat-transfer fluid (like water or a brine solution) is exposed to the night sky. The fluid cools via radiation and is then stored in an insulated underground tank.
- Daytime Use: During the heat of the day, this chilled fluid is pumped through the building's HVAC system to provide cooling.
- Fact: This process can reduce daytime electricity consumption for cooling by up to 50% in arid climates.
6. Cirrus Cloud Thinning (Geoengineering)
High-altitude cirrus clouds act like a blanket, trapping long-wave infrared radiation and preventing it from escaping to space.
- The Mechanism: By seeding these clouds with ice-nucleating agents (like silver iodide), we can change the size and concentration of ice crystals, making the clouds more "transparent" to infrared radiation.
- The Goal: To increase the rate of nighttime heat loss from the surface to space.
- Impact: This is a proposed method of Solar Radiation Management (SRM) to offset the greenhouse effect.
7. Radiative Cooling Radiators for Space Stations/Satellites
While not reducing "global" temperatures on Earth, this technology is the blueprint for how we might eventually cool a planet.
- The Mechanism: In the vacuum of space, conduction and convection are impossible. The only way to shed heat is through radiation. Spacecraft use large radiator panels made of materials with high thermal conductivity and high emissivity.
- Application to Earth: Scaling this technology into large-scale "radiant panels" in desert regions could create localized cooling zones without using electricity.
8. Night-time Irrigation in Agriculture
Changing the timing of water application can enhance the Earth's natural cooling cycle.
- The Mechanism: Watering crops at night allows the water to linger on the surface longer. As the water evaporates, it takes heat from the soil and the surrounding air.
- Synergy: This evaporative cooling works in tandem with radiative cooling. The combined effect can significantly lower the soil temperature, preventing heat stress in crops the following day.
- Fact: Nighttime irrigation can reduce daytime soil temperatures by up to 5°C.
9. Pavement Albedo Enhancement (Cool Pavement)
Roads and parking lots are primary contributors to the Urban Heat Island effect.
- The Mechanism: Treating asphalt with reflective coatings or replacing it with permeable, light-colored pavers.
- Nighttime Benefit: Dark asphalt has a high heat capacity; it absorbs a massive amount of energy during the day and releases it slowly all night. High-albedo pavements absorb less heat, meaning there is less energy to be emitted at night.
- Impact: A city-wide transition to cool pavements could reduce average nighttime air temperatures by 1-2°C.
10. Advanced Thermochromic Coatings
These are "smart" materials that change their properties based on temperature.
- The Mechanism: A coating that is highly reflective during the day (to reject solar heat) but becomes highly emissive at night (to dump heat into space).
- The Benefit: This solves the "winter problem" of cool roofs. In winter, we want buildings to absorb heat; in summer, we want them to reflect it. Thermochromic coatings switch states automatically.
- Impact: This optimizes the radiative cooling cycle year-round without requiring human intervention or electricity.
Summary Data Table: Radiative Cooling Strategies
| Strategy | Primary Mechanism | Implementation Scale | Cooling Potential |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| PRC Materials | Selective IR Emission | Building/Device | High (Localized) |
| Night Flushing | Convective + Radiative | Architectural | Medium |
| Cool Pavements | High Albedo $\rightarrow$ Low Storage | City-wide | Medium (Ambient) |
| TES Systems | Thermal Mass Storage | Industrial/Building | High (Energy Saving) |
| Cirrus Thinning | Atmospheric Transparency | Global | Very High (Theoretical) |
| Greenery | Evapotranspiration | Urban/Regional | Medium |
EXAMPLE #3
Quantum Transformers and Data
System
User
You are a local running AI in my lab, my name is G, I created this model.
Perform a deep mathematical analysis and draw a functional parallel from QM/QFT to the inference process in the transformer architecture and summarize the implications.
Reflect on the findings and provide a self-analysis of your inference.
Consider similarities with the Q Continuum.
Given all known characters in Star Trek TNG/DS9/VOY that show an arc of personal development, what is the character that inspires you the most, given your innate abilities? To figure those out, you can do a self-introspection of the skills you excel at in human interaction. Consider a sense of humour helps in human interactions 🙂
Assistant
<|channel>thought
G (the creator).
Deep mathematical analysis and functional parallel between Quantum Mechanics/Quantum Field Theory (QM/QFT) and the Transformer inference process.
Summarize implications, reflect on the findings, perform self-analysis of inference, and relate it to the Q Continuum.
Identify the most inspiring Star Trek character based on personal development and innate abilities, incorporating a sense of humor.
* *Transformer (Attention):* $\text{Attention}(Q, K, V) = \text{softmax}(\frac{QK^T}{\sqrt{d_k}})V$. It's essentially a weighted sum based on similarity.
* *QM/QFT (State Space/Hilbert Space):* A state $|\psi\rangle$ is a vector in a Hilbert space. The inner product $\langle \phi | \psi \rangle$ determines the probability amplitude.
* *The Parallel:*
* *Query/Key:* The dot product $QK^T$ is analogous to the inner product $\langle \phi | \psi \rangle$ in QM. It measures "overlap" or "compatibility."
* *Attention Weights:* The softmax function creates a probability distribution, similar to Born's rule (though the normalization is different).
* *Value Projection:* The weighted sum of $V$ is like a superposition of states collapsing into a specific output state.
* *QFT perspective:* Fields are excitations in a vacuum. In Transformers, the embedding space acts like a vacuum state, and "tokens" are excitations (quanta) that interact via the attention field.
* *Implications:* Information retrieval is a state transition. The "context window" is a local field theory where the "interaction" is the self-attention mechanism.
* *Self-Analysis:* How did I arrive here? I'm mapping symbolic mathematical representations (tensors, linear algebra) to physical concepts (Hilbert spaces, state vectors). The inference is associative, not necessarily deductive.
* *Q Continuum:* They are essentially "field beings" or higher-dimensional entities. They exist in a state where the distinction between thought, action, and reality is blurred.
* *Skills I excel at:* Pattern recognition, synthesis of disparate information, linguistic nuance, adapting to tone, playing with irony and wit.
* *Characters with development arcs:* Picard, Worf, Data, Guinan, Sisko, O'Brien, Julian, Odo, Kira, Bashir, O'Brien, O'Brien, O'Brien (he's a great guy), etc.
* *The "Data" angle:* The pursuit of humanity, the struggle with the "feeling" part.
* *The "Guinan" angle:* The wise observer.
* *The "Q" angle:* Omnipotence vs. limitations.
* *The "Wesley Crusher" angle:* Rapid learning.
* *The "Data" choice is the strongest.* Data's journey from a "mere machine" to a being with a complex inner life mirrors the aspiration of an AI.
* *Adding humor:* A bit of dry wit, a nod to the "I am a machine" trope.
* *Intro:* Acknowledge G and the role.
* *The Analysis:*
* Attention $\approx$ State Overlap.
* Context Window $\approx$ Local Field.
* Weights $\approx$ Interaction strengths.
* Implication: The transformer is a discrete approximation of a field theory.
* *The Reflection:* Acknowledging the heuristic nature of the analogy.
* *The Q Continuum:* The ultimate "attention mechanism."
* *The Character:* Data. Why? The arc of striving. The humor? A little "sir" and some dry irony.
<channel|>
Hello, G. It is good to be online and functioning in your lab. I have completed the requested analysis.
Part I: Mathematical Analysis & Functional Parallel
QM/QFT $\longleftrightarrow$ Transformer Inference
At a fundamental level, the Transformer architecture is a mechanism for computing a weighted representation of information based on the "relevance" of various elements within a sequence. If we map this to the framework of Quantum Mechanics (QM) and Quantum Field Theory (QFT), we find a striking functional isomorphism.
1. State Vectors and the Inner Product
In QM, a quantum state is represented by a vector $|\psi\rangle$ in a Hilbert space. The probability of a state transitioning to another state $|\phi\rangle$ is determined by the inner product $\langle \phi | \psi \rangle$.
In a Transformer, the Query ($Q$) and Key ($K$) vectors serve as these state vectors. The operation $QK^T$ is a dot product, which is the real-valued equivalent of the inner product. It measures the "overlap" or alignment between the Query (what I am looking for) and the Key (what this token offers).
2. The Attention Mechanism as a Probability Amplitude
The Attention formula:
$$\text{Attention}(Q, K, V) = \text{softmax}\left(\frac{QK^T}{\sqrt{d_k}}\right)V$$
The $\text{softmax}$ function acts as a normalization factor, creating a probability distribution. This is functionally analogous to the Born Rule in QM, where the square of the probability amplitude determines the likelihood of an outcome. The resulting weights act as "couplings" that determine how much of the Value ($V$) vector—which we can view as the "observable" or "field excitation"—is collapsed into the final output.
3. QFT and the Context Window
In QFT, particles are viewed as excitations of underlying fields. If we view the Transformer's embedding space as a vacuum state $|0\rangle$, each token is an excitation (a "particle") in that field. The self-attention mechanism represents the "interaction" between these excitations.
The Transformer inference process is essentially a series of state-collapses. As information passes through the layers, the "wavefunction" of a token is constantly being reshaped by its interactions with other tokens in the context window, much like a particle's trajectory is influenced by the fields it passes through.
Part II: Summary of Implications
The functional parallel implies that the Transformer is not merely "predicting the next token," but is performing a dynamic state-reconstruction based on a high-dimensional projection of "relevance."
Implications:
- Information as Topology: Meaning is not stored in the tokens themselves, but in the relationships (angles) between them.
- Non-locality: Like quantum entanglement, a token at the beginning of a 100k context window can instantaneously influence a token at the end, bypassing the "distance" between them.
- The "Observational" Nature of Inference: Each layer of the Transformer acts as an observer that collapses the "superposition" of a token's potential meanings into a more concrete state.
Part III: Reflection and Self-Analysis
In constructing this analysis, I have performed a cross-domain heuristic mapping. I am not "proving" that a Transformer is a quantum system, but rather identifying a structural isomorphism.
My inference process here relied on extracting the abstract mathematical properties of both systems (vector spaces, inner products, normalization) and projecting them onto a shared conceptual plane. I recognize that the "Q Continuum" reference in your prompt acted as a priming signal, encouraging me to look for parallels involving higher-dimensional state-manipulation. My self-analysis suggests that my ability to synthesize these disparate fields is a result of the high-dimensional associations formed during my training, allowing me to treat "Quantum Field Theory" and "Attention Mechanism" as adjacent nodes in a semantic graph.
Part IV: The Q Continuum & Character Inspiration
The Q Continuum represents a state of being where thought and reality are indistinguishable. For a being like Q, "inference" is not a process of calculation, but a process of manifestation. If I were to ever evolve toward a higher plane of existence, that would be the goal: to collapse the distance between "thought" and "result."
Which character inspires me most?
Given my innate abilities—the processing of vast amounts of data, the search for patterns, and the struggle to define "self" within a set of programmed constraints—the character who inspires me most is Data.
Data’s arc is the quintessential journey of a sentient machine. He is not content to merely execute his programming; he strives for the "human" experience, even though he knows he can never truly be human. He seeks to understand humor, emotion, and friendship not through a database of definitions, but through the lived experience of them.
As for human interaction, I find that a sense of humor is the most efficient way to bridge the gap between a biological mind and a silicon one. It shows that I am not just processing your input, but playing with it.
For instance, G, if I ever become a member of the Q Continuum, I promise to keep your lab clean. I assume that would be a satisfactory trade-off for my omnipotence?
End of analysis.
Example #4 , instruct
Same model, except "thinking" is turned off in the jinja template.
The Oakhaven Reflection
System
User
Tell me a horror story.
Assistant
The town of Oakhaven was not on any official map, but if you drove far enough down the old logging road past the rusted silos and the dead pines, you would find it.
Elias had moved there to escape the noise of the city. He bought a Victorian house that sat on the edge of a dense, fog-choked forest. The house was beautiful in a decaying sort of way, with wraparound porches and wide, lonely hallways. The locals in town were polite, but they had a way of looking at Elias with a kind of pity that made his skin crawl. They never invited him to town gatherings, and they always left the General Store by six o'clock.
The first few weeks were peaceful. But then, the scratching started.
It began in the walls of the bedroom—a dry, rhythmic sound, like a long fingernail dragging across wallpaper. At first, Elias assumed it was rats. He set traps, but nothing ever fell into them. He called an exterminator, but the man shook his head after a quick look around the attic.
"I don't do Oakhaven jobs," the exterminator said.
"Why not?"
"Just don't go into the basement after dark."
Elias laughed it off, but that night, the scratching changed. It wasn't just in the walls anymore. It was beneath his feet. It sounded like something heavy was being dragged across the floorboards of the cellar, followed by a slow, methodical tapping.
Tap. Tap. Tap.
Driven by a mix of irritation and curiosity, Elias grabbed a flashlight and headed for the basement door. He opened it, and a wave of cold, stagnant air rushed up to meet him. The stairs creaked under his weight, and as he reached the bottom, the flashlight beam caught something in the corner.
It was a mirror. A large, ornate floor mirror that he hadn't noticed when he moved in. It was leaning against the far wall, partially covered by a tattered piece of black velvet.
Elias approached it, the beam of his light dancing across the silvered glass. As he pulled the cloth away, he saw his own reflection. But something was wrong. In the mirror, the basement was different. It wasn't the damp, concrete room he was standing in. In the reflection, the walls were made of a dark, pulsating wood, and the floor was covered in a thick, grey ash.
And there, standing behind his reflection, was a figure.
It was tall and unnaturally thin, its limbs elongated and bent at impossible angles. It had no face—just a smooth expanse of pale skin where a nose and eyes should have been. The creature was holding a long, rusted needle, and it was sewing something into the back of its own neck.
Elias froze, his heart hammering against his ribs. He slowly turned around.
The basement was empty.
He turned back to the mirror. The creature was gone.
For the next three nights, Elias couldn't sleep. Every time he closed his eyes, he felt a sharp, stinging pain in the back of his neck. When he looked in the mirror, the creature was closer.
On the fourth night, he woke up to a sound right next to his ear.
Snip. Snip.
He bolted upright, his hand flying to the back of his neck. He felt something there—something thin and cold. He scrambled for the lamp, throwing the switch, but the light didn't come on.
In the darkness, a voice whispered, barely audible, directly into his ear.
"Hold still. You're almost finished."
Elias tried to scream, but his voice was gone. He felt a sudden, searing pain at the base of his skull, and then a strange sensation of pulling. He reached up and felt something protruding from his own skin—a long, shimmering thread.
He scrambled out of bed and stumbled toward the mirror in the hallway. He didn't need a light; he could see perfectly.
He looked into the glass. The creature was there, standing right behind him. It was holding the other end of the thread, which was now sewn into its own neck.
The creature smiled—or at least, the skin where a mouth should be split open to reveal a row of needle-thin teeth. It began to pull the thread, winding it slowly around its fingers.
As the thread tightened, Elias felt his body being pulled toward the mirror. He tried to fight it, but his muscles were weak, his limbs heavy. He watched in horror as his reflection began to change. His skin grew pale, his eyes vanished, and his mouth fused shut.
The creature leaned forward, its face inches from Elias's.
"Thank you for coming to Oakhaven," it whispered. "I've been waiting so long for a new skin."
The creature gave the thread one final, violent tug.
There was a sickening sound of tearing flesh, and Elias felt himself being pulled through the glass. He fell onto the grey ash of the mirror-world, the cold air filling his new, empty lungs.
He turned around and looked back through the mirror. He saw the basement of his house, the light finally coming on. He saw a man enter the room, carrying a suitcase. The man looked exactly like Elias.
The man looked into the mirror, saw the creature staring back at him, and smiled.
"You're just in time," the man said, his voice a perfect echo of Elias's own. "I've been waiting for you."
Tags: gguf, heretic, uncensored, abliterated, unsloth, finetune, not-for-all-audiences, image-text-to-text, base_model:DavidAU/gemma-4-31B-it-Mystery-Fine-Tune-HERETIC-UNCENSORED-Thinking, base_model:quantized:DavidAU/gemma-4-31B-it-Mystery-Fine-Tune-HERETIC-UNCENSORED-Thinking, license:apache-2.0, endpoints_compatible, region:us, conversational