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LW - Thoughts on the impact of RLHF research by paulfchristiano

<a href="https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/vwu4kegAEZTBtpT6p/thoughts-on-the-impact-of-rlhf-research">Link to original article</a><br/><br/>Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: Thoughts on the impact of RLHF research, published by paulfchristiano on January 25, 2023 on LessWrong. In this post I’m going to describe my basic justification for working on RLHF in 2017-2020, which I still stand behind. I’ll discuss various arguments that RLHF research had an overall negative impact and explain why I don’t find them persuasive. I'll also clarify that I don't think research on RLHF is automatically net positive; alignment research should address real alignment problems, and we should reject a vague association between "RLHF progress" and "alignment progress." Background on my involvement in RLHF work Here are some background views about alignment I held in 2015 and still hold today. I expect disagreements about RLHF will come down to disagreements about this background: The simplest plausible strategies for alignment involve humans (maybe with the assistance of AI systems) evaluating a model’s actions based on how much we expect to like their consequences, and then training the models to produce highly-evaluated actions. (This is in contrast with, for example, trying to formally specify the human utility function, or notions of corrigibility / low-impact / etc, in some way.) Simple versions of this approach are expected to run into difficulties, and potentially to be totally unworkable, because: Evaluating consequences is hard. A treacherous turn can cause trouble too quickly to detect or correct even if you are able to do so, and it’s challenging to evaluate treacherous turn probability at training time. It’s very unclear if those issues are fatal before or after AI systems are powerful enough to completely transform human society (and in particular the state of AI alignment). Even if they are fatal, many of the approaches to resolving them still have the same basic structure of learning from expensive evaluations of actions. In order to overcome the fundamental difficulties with RLHF, I have long been interested in techniques like iterated amplification and adversarial training. However, prior to 2017 most researchers I talked to in ML (and many researchers in alignment) thought that the basic strategy of training AI with expensive human evaluations was impractical for more boring reasons and so weren't interested in these difficulties. On top of that, we obviously weren’t able to actually implement anything more fancy than RLHF since all of these methods involve learning from expensive feedback. I worked on RLHF work to try to facilitate and motivate work on fixes. The history of my involvement: My first post on this topic was in 2015. When I started full-time at OpenAI in 2017 it seemed to me like it would be an impactful project; I considered doing a version with synthetic human feedback (showing that we could learn from a practical amount of algorithmically-defined feedback) but my manager Dario Amodei convinced me it would be more compelling to immediately go for human feedback. The initial project was surprisingly successful and published here. I then intended to implement a version with language models aiming to be complete in the first half of 2018 (aiming to build an initial amplification prototype with LMs around end of 2018; both of these timelines were about 2.5x too optimistic). This seemed like the most important domain to study RLHF and alignment more broadly. In mid-2017 Alec Radford helped me do a prototype with LSTM language models (prior to the release of transformers); the prototype didn’t look promising enough to scale up. In mid-2017 Geoffrey Irving joined OpenAI and was excited about starting with RLHF and then going beyond it using debate; he also thought language models were the most important domain to study and had more conviction about that. In 2018 he started a larger team working on fine-tuning on language models, w...

First published

01/25/2023

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education

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Link to original articleWelcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: Thoughts on the impact of RLHF research, published by paulfchristiano on January 25, 2023 on LessWrong. In this post I’m going to describe my basic justification for working on RLHF in 2017-2020, which I still stand behind. I’ll discuss various arguments that RLHF research had an overall negative impact and explain why I don’t find them persuasive. I'll also clarify that I don't think research on RLHF is automatically net positive; alignment research should address real alignment problems, and we should reject a vague association between "RLHF progress" and "alignment progress." Background on my involvement in RLHF work Here are some background views about alignment I held in 2015 and still hold today. I expect disagreements about RLHF will come down to disagreements about this background: The simplest plausible strategies for alignment involve humans (maybe with the assistance of AI systems) evaluating a model’s actions based on how much we expect to like their consequences, and then training the models to produce highly-evaluated actions. (This is in contrast with, for example, trying to formally specify the human utility function, or notions of corrigibility / low-impact / etc, in some way.) Simple versions of this approach are expected to run into difficulties, and potentially to be totally unworkable, because: Evaluating consequences is hard. A treacherous turn can cause trouble too quickly to detect or correct even if you are able to do so, and it’s challenging to evaluate treacherous turn probability at training time. It’s very unclear if those issues are fatal before or after AI systems are powerful enough to completely transform human society (and in particular the state of AI alignment). Even if they are fatal, many of the approaches to resolving them still have the same basic structure of learning from expensive evaluations of actions. In order to overcome the fundamental difficulties with RLHF, I have long been interested in techniques like iterated amplification and adversarial training. However, prior to 2017 most researchers I talked to in ML (and many researchers in alignment) thought that the basic strategy of training AI with expensive human evaluations was impractical for more boring reasons and so weren't interested in these difficulties. On top of that, we obviously weren’t able to actually implement anything more fancy than RLHF since all of these methods involve learning from expensive feedback. I worked on RLHF work to try to facilitate and motivate work on fixes. The history of my involvement: My first post on this topic was in 2015. When I started full-time at OpenAI in 2017 it seemed to me like it would be an impactful project; I considered doing a version with synthetic human feedback (showing that we could learn from a practical amount of algorithmically-defined feedback) but my manager Dario Amodei convinced me it would be more compelling to immediately go for human feedback. The initial project was surprisingly successful and published here. I then intended to implement a version with language models aiming to be complete in the first half of 2018 (aiming to build an initial amplification prototype with LMs around end of 2018; both of these timelines were about 2.5x too optimistic). This seemed like the most important domain to study RLHF and alignment more broadly. In mid-2017 Alec Radford helped me do a prototype with LSTM language models (prior to the release of transformers); the prototype didn’t look promising enough to scale up. In mid-2017 Geoffrey Irving joined OpenAI and was excited about starting with RLHF and then going beyond it using debate; he also thought language models were the most important domain to study and had more conviction about that. In 2018 he started a larger team working on fine-tuning on language models, w...

Duration

14 minutes

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The Nonlinear Library: LessWrong Weekly

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