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Aligning LLMs with Domain Invariant Reward Models

A framework is proposed for training domain-invariant reward models using feedback from source domains to align large language models with human preferences in target domains lacking direct preference data.

Year
2025
Venue
arXiv 2025
Authors
2
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arxiv.org/abs/2501.00911ARXIV-DEFAULT
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Abstract

Aligning large language models (LLMs) to human preferences is challenging in domains where preference data is unavailable. We address the problem of learning reward models for such target domains by leveraging feedback collected from simpler source domains, where human preferences are easier to obtain. Our key insight is that, while domains may differ significantly, human preferences convey \emph{domain-agnostic} concepts that can be effectively captured by a reward model. We propose \method, a framework that trains domain-invariant reward models by optimizing a dual loss: a domain loss that minimizes the divergence between source and target distribution, and a source loss that optimizes preferences on the source domain. We show \method is a general approach that we evaluate and analyze across 4 distinct settings: (1) Cross-lingual transfer (accuracy: $0.621 \rightarrow 0.661$), (2) Clean-to-noisy (accuracy: $0.671 \rightarrow 0.703$), (3) Few-shot-to-full transfer (accuracy: $0.845 \rightarrow 0.920$), and (4) Simple-to-complex tasks transfer (correlation: $0.508 \rightarrow 0.556$). Our code, models and data are available at \url{https://github.com/portal-cornell/dial}.

Authors

2