LLMs demonstrate remarkable capabilities in following natural language instructions, largely due to instruction-tuning on high-quality datasets. While synthetic data generation has emerged as a scalable approach for creating such datasets, maintaining consistent quality standards remains challenging. Recent approaches incorporate feedback to improve data quality, but typically operate at the sample level, generating and applying feedback for each response individually. In this work, we propose Reference-Level Feedback, a novel methodology that instead collects feedback based on high-quality reference samples from carefully curated seed data. We use this feedback to capture rich signals of desirable characteristics that can be propagated to newly synthesized data. We present REFED, a dataset of 10K instruction-response pairs synthesized using such feedback. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach by showing that Llama-3.1-8B-Instruct finetuned on REFED achieves state-of-the-art performance among similar-sized SFT-based models on AlpacaEval 2.0 and strong results on Arena-Hard. Through extensive experiments, we show that our approach consistently outperforms traditional sample-level feedback methods with significantly fewer feedback collections and improves performance across different model architectures.
Beyond Sample-Level Feedback: Using Reference-Level Feedback to Guide Data Synthesis
Reference-Level Feedback improves synthetic dataset quality by leveraging high-quality reference samples, enhancing LLM instruction-following performance with fewer feedback collections.
- Year
- 2025
- Venue
- arXiv 2025
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- 4
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/2502.04511ARXIV-DEFAULT
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