Latent Preference Coding: Aligning Large Language Models via Discrete Latent Codes

Published: 01 May 2025, Last Modified: 18 Jun 2025ICML 2025 posterEveryoneRevisionsBibTeXCC BY 4.0
Abstract: Large language models (LLMs) have achieved remarkable success, yet aligning their generations with human preferences remains a critical challenge. Existing approaches to preference modeling often rely on an explicit or implicit reward function, overlooking the intricate and multifaceted nature of human preferences that may encompass conflicting factors across diverse tasks and populations. To address this limitation, we introduce Latent Preference Coding (LPC), a novel framework that models the implicit factors as well as their combinations behind holistic preferences using discrete latent codes. LPC seamlessly integrates with various offline alignment algorithms, automatically inferring the underlying factors and their importance from data without relying on pre-defined reward functions and hand-crafted combination weights. Extensive experiments on multiple benchmarks demonstrate that LPC consistently improves upon three alignment algorithms (DPO, SimPO, and IPO) using three base models (Mistral-7B, Llama3-8B, and Llama3-Instruct-8B). Furthermore, deeper analysis reveals that the learned latent codes effectively capture the differences in the distribution of human preferences and significantly enhance the robustness of alignment algorithms against noise in data. By providing a unified representation for the multifarious preference factors, LPC paves the way towards developing more robust and versatile alignment techniques for responsible deployment of powerful LLMs.
Lay Summary: We propose a method that models human preference as a combination of latent factors. The method is called Latent Preference Coding (LPC). LPC is based on discrete variational inference and can be seamlessly integrated with various offline alignment algorithms. Extensive experiments on multiple benchmarks demonstrate that LPC consistently improves upon three alignment algorithms (DPO, SimPO, and IPO) using three base models (Mistral-7B, Llama3-8B, and Llama3-Instruct-8B). Furthermore, deeper analysis reveals that the learned latent codes effectively capture the differences in the distribution of human preferences and significantly enhance the robustness of alignment algorithms against noise in data. By providing a unified representation for the multifarious preference factors, LPC paves the way towards developing more robust and versatile alignment techniques for responsible deployment of powerful LLMs.
Primary Area: Social Aspects->Alignment
Keywords: large language model, preference modeling
Submission Number: 3233
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