I want to fine tune an LLM to “steer” it in the right direction. I have plenty of training examples in which I stop the generation early and correct the output to go in the right direction, and then resume generation.
Basically, for my dataset doing 100 “steers” on a single task is much cheaper than having to correct 100 full generations completely, and I think each of these “steer” operations has value and could be used for training.
So maybe I’m looking for some kind of localized DPO. Does anyone know if something like this exists?
I dont know what you mean with steering?
First of all, have you tried giving the model multiple examples of input output pairs in the context, this already helps the model a lot to output the correct format.
Second you can force a specific output structure by using a regex or grammar: https://python.langchain.com/docs/integrations/chat/outlines/#constrained-generation https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp/blob/master/grammars/README.md
And third, in case you want to train a model to respond differently and the previous steps were not good enough, you can fine-tune. I can recommend this project to you, as it teaches how to fine-tune a model: https://github.com/huggingface/smol-course
Depending on the size of the model, that you want to fine-tune and the amount of compute that you have available you can either train by updating all parameters like ORPO or you can train via PEFT (LoRA)
Thanks for your answer. I think to be clear, what I’m looking for is a kind of masked fine-tuning. You see, I want to “steer” a particular output instead of providing complete examples, which are costly to create.
The steering would be something like this:
What I would like to do is train the model based on these corrections I give it, where many corrections might be part of the same overall generation. Conceptually I think each correction must have some training value. I don’t know much about masking, but what I mean here is that I don’t want it to train on a few tens or hundreds of (incomplete) samples but rather thousands of (masked) “steers” that correct the course of the rest of the sample’s generated text.