English

LRHP: Learning Representations for Human Preferences via Preference Pairs

Computation and Language 2024-10-08 v1 Artificial Intelligence

Abstract

To improve human-preference alignment training, current research has developed numerous preference datasets consisting of preference pairs labeled as "preferred" or "dispreferred". These preference pairs are typically used to encode human preferences into a single numerical value through reward modeling, which acts as a reward signal during reinforcement learning from human feedback (RLHF). However, representing these human preferences as a numerical value complicates the analysis of these preferences and restricts their broader applications other than RLHF. In contrast, in this work, we introduce a preference representation learning task that aims to construct a richer and more structured representation of human preferences. We further develop a more generalizable framework, Learning Representations for Human Preferences via preference pairs (namely LRHP), which extends beyond traditional reward modeling to tackle this task. We verify the utility of preference representations in two downstream tasks: preference data selection and preference margin prediction. Building upon the human preferences in representations, we achieve strong performance in both tasks, significantly outperforming baselines.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2410.04503,
  title  = {LRHP: Learning Representations for Human Preferences via Preference Pairs},
  author = {Chenglong Wang and Yang Gan and Yifu Huo and Yongyu Mu and Qiaozhi He and Murun Yang and Tong Xiao and Chunliang Zhang and Tongran Liu and Jingbo Zhu},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2410.04503},
  year   = {2024}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-28T19:10:19.995Z