Deciphering Cultural Representations in Large Language Models via Sparse Autoencoders

Chenye Zou, Difan Jiao, Lijie Hu


Abstract
Large Language Models (LLMs) are increasingly deployed worldwide, yet they exhibit strong Western-centric biases, and the internal mechanisms governing their cultural behaviors remain poorly understood. Prior work has identified so-called cultural neurons, but individual neurons are often polysemous, conflating abstract cultural knowledge with surface-level lexical cues due to superposition. We apply Sparse Autoencoders (SAEs) to decompose intermediate LLM activations into sparse, interpretable feature representations that disentangle these factors. This analysis reveals culturally selective features that remain invariant across paraphrasing and task formats, indicating abstraction beyond lexical correlations. Through targeted feature ablation, we provide causal evidence that these features are necessary for cultural reasoning: their removal selectively degrades performance on culturally conditioned tasks. Furthermore, we show that steering model activations along these feature directions is sufficient to systematically modulate cultural-related knowledge generation, without retraining. Together, our results offer the first causal evidence that LLMs encode cultural knowledge as decoupled semantic structures rather than surface patterns, enabling a scalable pathway toward cultural alignment through mechanistic intervention. Code is available at https://github.com/IAN-YE/Cultural-features-SAE.
Anthology ID:
2026.findings-acl.278
Volume:
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: ACL 2026
Month:
July
Year:
2026
Address:
San Diego, California, United States
Editors:
Maria Liakata, Viviane P. Moreira, Jiajun Zhang, David Jurgens
Venue:
Findings
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Publisher:
Association for Computational Linguistics
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Pages:
5656–5677
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https://preview.aclanthology.org/ingest-acl/2026.findings-acl.278/
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Cite (ACL):
Chenye Zou, Difan Jiao, and Lijie Hu. 2026. Deciphering Cultural Representations in Large Language Models via Sparse Autoencoders. In Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: ACL 2026, pages 5656–5677, San Diego, California, United States. Association for Computational Linguistics.
Cite (Informal):
Deciphering Cultural Representations in Large Language Models via Sparse Autoencoders (Zou et al., Findings 2026)
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