While state-of-the-art language models have achieved impressive results, they remain susceptible to inference-time adversarial attacks, such as adversarial prompts generated by red teams arXiv:2209.07858. One approach proposed to improve the general quality of language model generations is multi-agent debate, where language models self-evaluate through discussion and feedback arXiv:2305.14325. We implement multi-agent debate between current state-of-the-art language models and evaluate models' susceptibility to red team attacks in both single- and multi-agent settings. We find that multi-agent debate can reduce model toxicity when jailbroken or less capable models are forced to debate with non-jailbroken or more capable models. We also find marginal improvements through the general usage of multi-agent interactions. We further perform adversarial prompt content classification via embedding clustering, and analyze the susceptibility of different models to different types of attack topics.
Combating Adversarial Attacks with Multi-Agent Debate
Multi-agent debate among language models reduces toxicity and improves robustness against adversarial prompts, as evidenced by embedding clustering analysis.
- Year
- 2024
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- arXiv 2024
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- 3
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- arxiv.org/abs/2401.05998ARXIV-DEFAULT
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