English

CLUE: Conflict-guided Localization for LLM Unlearning Framework

Machine Learning 2025-09-26 v1 Computation and Language

Abstract

The LLM unlearning aims to eliminate the influence of undesirable data without affecting causally unrelated information. This process typically involves using a forget set to remove target information, alongside a retain set to maintain non-target capabilities. While recent localization-based methods demonstrate promise in identifying important neurons to be unlearned, they fail to disentangle neurons responsible for forgetting undesirable knowledge or retaining essential skills, often treating them as a single entangled group. As a result, these methods apply uniform interventions, risking catastrophic over-forgetting or incomplete erasure of the target knowledge. To address this, we turn to circuit discovery, a mechanistic interpretability technique, and propose the Conflict-guided Localization for LLM Unlearning framEwork (CLUE). This framework identifies the forget and retain circuit composed of important neurons, and then the circuits are transformed into conjunctive normal forms (CNF). The assignment of each neuron in the CNF satisfiability solution reveals whether it should be forgotten or retained. We then provide targeted fine-tuning strategies for different categories of neurons. Extensive experiments demonstrate that, compared to existing localization methods, CLUE achieves superior forget efficacy and retain utility through precise neural localization.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2509.20977,
  title  = {CLUE: Conflict-guided Localization for LLM Unlearning Framework},
  author = {Hang Chen and Jiaying Zhu and Xinyu Yang and Wenya Wang},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2509.20977},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

10 pages

R2 v1 2026-07-01T05:55:48.251Z