The risk of harmful content generated by large language models (LLMs) becomes a critical concern. This paper presents a systematic study on assessing and improving LLMs' capability to perform the task of \textbf{course-correction}, \ie, the model can steer away from generating harmful content autonomously. To start with, we introduce the \textsc{C$^2$-Eval} benchmark for quantitative assessment and analyze 10 popular LLMs, revealing varying proficiency of current safety-tuned LLMs in course-correction. To improve, we propose fine-tuning LLMs with preference learning, emphasizing the preference for timely course-correction. Using an automated pipeline, we create \textsc{C$^2$-Syn}, a synthetic dataset with 750K pairwise preferences, to teach models the concept of timely course-correction through data-driven preference learning. Experiments on 2 LLMs, \textsc{Llama2-Chat 7B} and \textsc{Qwen2 7B}, show that our method effectively enhances course-correction skills without affecting general performance. Additionally, it effectively improves LLMs' safety, particularly in resisting jailbreak attacks.
Course-Correction: Safety Alignment Using Synthetic Preferences
The study assesses and enhances large language models' capability to autonomously avoid harmful content generation through a benchmark and preference learning fine-tuning.
- Year
- 2024
- Venue
- arXiv 2024
- Authors
- 9
- Hosting
- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- Abstract & full text
- arxiv.org/abs/2407.16637v2ARXIV-DEFAULT
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