Large reasoning models (LRMs) with multi-step reasoning capabilities have shown remarkable problem-solving abilities, yet they exhibit concerning safety vulnerabilities that remain poorly understood. In this work, we investigate why safety alignment fails in reasoning models through a mechanistic interpretability lens. Using a linear probing approach to trace refusal intentions across token positions, we discover a striking phenomenon termed as refusal cliff: many poorly-aligned reasoning models correctly identify harmful prompts and maintain strong refusal intentions during their thinking process, but experience a sharp drop in refusal scores at the final tokens before output generation. This suggests that these models are not inherently unsafe; rather, their refusal intentions are systematically suppressed. Through causal intervention analysis, we identify a sparse set of attention heads that negatively contribute to refusal behavior. Ablating just 3% of these heads can reduce attack success rates below 10%. Building on these mechanistic insights, we propose Cliff-as-a-Judge, a novel data selection method that identifies training examples exhibiting the largest refusal cliff to efficiently repair reasoning models' safety alignment. This approach achieves comparable safety improvements using only 1.7% of the vanilla safety training data, demonstrating a less-is-more effect in safety alignment.
Refusal Falls off a Cliff: How Safety Alignment Fails in Reasoning?
Research identifies a mechanism called the refusal cliff in large reasoning models, where refusal intentions drop sharply before output generation, and proposes a method to improve safety by focusing on specific attention heads and training examples.
- Year
- 2025
- Venue
- arXiv 2025
- Authors
- 10
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/2510.06036ARXIV-DEFAULT
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