Self-correction is essential for solving complex reasoning problems in vision-language models (VLMs). However, existing reinforcement learning (RL) methods struggle to learn it, as effective self-correction behaviors emerge only rarely, making learning signals extremely sparse. To address this challenge, we propose correction-specific rollouts (Octopus), an RL rollout augmentation framework that synthesizes dense self-correction examples by recombining existing rollouts. This augmentation simultaneously improves sample efficiency due to rollout reuse and stabilizes RL optimization through balanced supervision. Furthermore, we introduce a response-masking strategy that decouples self-correction from direct reasoning, avoiding signal conflicts and enabling both behaviors to be learned effectively. Building on this, we introduce Octopus-8B, a reasoning VLM with controllable self-correction capability. Across 7 benchmarks, it achieves SoTA performance among open-source VLMs, outperforming the best RLVR baseline by 1.0 score while requiring only 0.72times training time per step.
Learning Self-Correction in Vision-Language Models via Rollout Augmentation
Octopus, an RL rollout augmentation framework, enables efficient self-correction learning in vision-language models through synthetic example generation and response masking strategies.
- Year
- 2026
- Venue
- arXiv 2026
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- 4
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/2602.08503ARXIV-DEFAULT
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