Combining existing pre-trained LLMs is a promising approach for diverse reasoning tasks. However, task-level expert selection is often too coarse-grained, since different instances may require different expertise. To address this, we propose Skill-MoE, a symbolic, skill-based, and gradient-free Mixture-of-Experts framework for instance-level expert selection. Skill-MoE infers skills (e.g., algebra in mathematics) from each query, selects experts based on skill relevance, and lets each expert generate its own reasoning. The resulting k outputs are then synthesized by an aggregator chosen for its ability to integrate diverse responses. While instance-level selection substantially improves performance, naively implementing it incurs heavy overhead from repeated model loading and offloading. We address this with a batch inference strategy that groups instances by assigned experts, allowing each model to be loaded only once. As a result, Skill-MoE integrates 16 expert models on a single GPU with runtime comparable to prior multi-agent baselines using 4 GPUs. Across diverse benchmarks (MMLU-Pro, GPQA, AIME, and MedMCQA), Skill-MoE achieves an average absolute improvement of 8.15% over the best baseline. It also generalizes well to unseen tasks and outperforms discussion-based methods without requiring expensive multi-round interactions.
Skill-Based Mixture-of-Experts: Adaptive Routing for Heterogeneous Reasoning via Inferred Skills
Combining existing pre-trained LLMs is a promising approach for diverse reasoning tasks. However, task-level expert selection is often too coarse-grained, since different instances may require different expertise.
- Year
- 2026
- Venue
- arXiv 2025
- Authors
- 5
- Hosting
- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
Cite
Notes
Only stored in your browser.
Attribution
- Abstract & full text
- arxiv.org/abs/2503.05641ARXIV-DEFAULT
- TL;DR
- Semantic Scholar