Geoffrey Cideron


2024

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Conditional Language Policy: A General Framework For Steerable Multi-Objective Finetuning
Kaiwen Wang | Rahul Kidambi | Ryan Sullivan | Alekh Agarwal | Christoph Dann | Andrea Michi | Marco Gelmi | Yunxuan Li | Raghav Gupta | Kumar Avinava Dubey | Alexandre Rame | Johan Ferret | Geoffrey Cideron | Le Hou | Hongkun Yu | Amr Ahmed | Aranyak Mehta | Leonard Hussenot | Olivier Bachem | Edouard Leurent
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: EMNLP 2024

Reward-based finetuning is crucial for aligning language policies with intended behaviors (*e.g.*, creativity and safety). A key challenge is to develop steerable language models that trade-off multiple (conflicting) objectives in a flexible and efficient manner. This paper presents Conditional Language Policy (CLP), a general framework for finetuning language models on multiple objectives. Building on techniques from multi-task training and parameter-efficient finetuning, CLP learn steerable models that effectively trade-off conflicting objectives at *inference time*. Notably, this does not require training or maintaining multiple models to achieve different trade-offs between the objectives. Through extensive experiments and ablations on two summarization datasets, we show that CLP learns steerable language models that outperform and Pareto-dominate the existing approaches for multi-objective

2023

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Factually Consistent Summarization via Reinforcement Learning with Textual Entailment Feedback
Paul Roit | Johan Ferret | Lior Shani | Roee Aharoni | Geoffrey Cideron | Robert Dadashi | Matthieu Geist | Sertan Girgin | Leonard Hussenot | Orgad Keller | Nikola Momchev | Sabela Ramos Garea | Piotr Stanczyk | Nino Vieillard | Olivier Bachem | Gal Elidan | Avinatan Hassidim | Olivier Pietquin | Idan Szpektor
Proceedings of the 61st Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)

Despite the seeming success of contemporary grounded text generation systems, they often tend to generate factually inconsistent text with respect to their input. This phenomenon is emphasized in tasks like summarization, in which the generated summaries should be corroborated by their source article. In this work we leverage recent progress on textual entailment models to directly address this problem for abstractive summarization systems. We use reinforcement learning with reference-free, textual-entailment rewards to optimize for factual consistency and explore the ensuing trade-offs, as improved consistency may come at the cost of less informative or more extractive summaries. Our results, according to both automatic metrics and human evaluation, show that our method considerably improves the faithfulness, salience and conciseness of the generated summaries.