English

Whose Boat Does it Float? Improving Personalization in Preference Tuning via Inferred User Personas

Computation and Language 2025-06-03 v2

Abstract

LLMs are aligned to follow input instructions by learning which of two responses users prefer for a prompt. However, such preference data do not convey why users prefer responses that are chosen or rejected, so LLMs trained on these datasets cannot tailor responses to varied user needs. To surface these parameters of personalization, we apply abductive reasoning to preference data, inferring needs and interests of users, i.e., personas, that may prefer either response. We test this idea in two steps: Persona Inference (PI), abductively inferring personas of users who prefer chosen or rejected outputs, and Persona Tailoring (PT), training models to tailor outputs to personas from PI. We show: 1) LLMs infer personas accurately explaining why different users may prefer both chosen or rejected outputs; 2) Training on preference data augmented with PI personas via PT boosts personalization and generalizes to supporting user-written personas; and 3) Rejected response personas form harder personalization evaluations, showing PT better aids users with uncommon preferences versus typical alignment methods. We argue for an abductive view of preferences for personalization, asking not only which response is better but when, why, and for whom.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2501.11549,
  title  = {Whose Boat Does it Float? Improving Personalization in Preference Tuning via Inferred User Personas},
  author = {Nishant Balepur and Vishakh Padmakumar and Fumeng Yang and Shi Feng and Rachel Rudinger and Jordan Lee Boyd-Graber},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2501.11549},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

ACL 2025

R2 v1 2026-06-28T21:11:26.593Z