Technology
Steering When Necessary: Flexible Steering Large Language Models with Backtracking
Large language models (LLMs) have achieved remarkable performance across many generation tasks. Nevertheless, effectively aligning them with desired behaviors remains a significant challenge. Activation steering is an effective and cost-efficient approach that directly modifies the activations of LLMs during the inference stage, aligning their responses with the desired behaviors and avoiding the high cost of fine-tuning. Existing methods typically indiscriminately intervene to all generations or rely solely on the question to determine intervention, which limits the accurate assessment of the intervention strength.
Horizon Reduction Makes RL Scalable
In this work, we study the scalability of offline reinforcement learning (RL) algorithms. In principle, a truly scalable offline RL algorithm should be able to solve any given problem, regardless of its complexity, given sufficient data, compute, and model capacity. We investigate if and how current offline RL algorithms match up to this promise on diverse, challenging, previously unsolved tasks, using datasets up to 1000 larger than typical offline RL datasets. We observe that despite scaling up data, many existing offline RL algorithms exhibit poor scaling behavior, saturating well below the maximum performance. We hypothesize that the horizon is the main cause behind the poor scaling of offline RL. We empirically verify this hypothesis through several analysis experiments, showing that long horizons indeed present a fundamental barrier to scaling up offline RL. We then show that various horizon reduction techniques substantially enhance scalability on challenging tasks. Based on our insights, we also introduce a minimal yet scalable method named SHARSA that effectively reduces the horizon. SHARSA achieves the best asymptotic performance and scaling behavior among our evaluation methods, showing that explicitly reducing the horizon unlocks the scalability of offline RL.
Don't Forget the Enjoin: FocalLoRA for Instruction Hierarchical Alignment in Large Language Models
Recent studies reveal that large language models (LLMs) often struggle to resolve conflicting instructions embedded within hierarchical prompts, resulting in decreased compliance with system-level directives and compromising the reliability of safety-critical applications. While earlier approaches attempt to improve instruction hierarchy awareness through prompt engineering or embedding-level modifications, they typically lack structural modeling and either offer limited gains or require extensive fine-tuning. In this work, we introduce $\textbf{FocalLoRA}$, a parameter-efficient and structure-aware framework that strengthens hierarchical instruction adherence by selectively optimizing structurally critical attention heads, referred to as $\textit{focal heads}$, which exhibit heightened sensitivity to instruction conflicts. Experiments across multiple models and a dedicated benchmark demonstrate that FocalLoRA markedly enhances system instruction compliance with minimal tuning cost. For instance, on Llama-8B, fine-tuning only 0.0188\% of parameters yields a 35.52\% $\uparrow$ in system instruction compliance.
RAG4GFM: Bridging Knowledge Gaps in Graph Foundation Models through Graph Retrieval Augmented Generation
Graph Foundation Models (GFMs) have demonstrated remarkable potential across graph learning tasks but face significant challenges in knowledge updating and reasoning faithfulness. To address these issues, we introduce the Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) paradigm for GFMs, which leverages graph knowledge retrieval. We propose RAG4GFM, an end-to-end framework that seamlessly integrates multi-level graph indexing, task-aware retrieval, and graph fusion enhancement. RAG4GFM implements a hierarchical graph indexing architecture, enabling multi-granular graph indexing while achieving efficient logarithmic-time retrieval. The task-aware retriever implements adaptive retrieval strategies for node, edge, and graph-level tasks to surface structurally and semantically relevant evidence. The graph fusion enhancement module fuses retrieved graph features with query features and augments the topology with sparse adjacency links that preserve structural and semantic proximity, yielding a fused graph for GFM inference.
Pixel Reasoner: Incentivizing Pixel Space Reasoning via Curiosity-Driven Reinforcement Learning
Chain-of-thought reasoning has significantly improved the performance of Large Language Models (LLMs) across various domains. However, this reasoning process has been confined exclusively to textual space, limiting its effectiveness in visually intensive tasks. To address this limitation, we introduce the concept of pixel-space reasoning. Within this novel framework, Vision-Language Models (VLMs) are equipped with a suite of visual reasoning operations, such as zoom-in and select-frame. These operations enable VLMs to directly inspect, interrogate, and infer from visual evidences, thereby enhancing reasoning fidelity for visual tasks.
Elastic Robust Unlearning of Specific Knowledge in Large Language Models
LLM unlearning aims to remove sensitive or harmful information within the model, thus reducing the potential risk of generating unexpected information. However, existing Preference Optimization (PO)-based unlearning methods suffer two limitations. First, their rigid reward setting limits the effect of unlearning.
HyperET: Efficient Training in Hyperbolic Space for Multi-modal Large Language Models
Multi-modal large language models (MLLMs) have emerged as a transformative approach for aligning visual and textual understanding. They typically require extremely high computational resources (e.g., thousands of GPUs) for training to achieve cross-modal alignment at multi-granularity levels. We argue that a key source of this inefficiency lies in the vision encoders they widely equip with, e.g., CLIP and SAM, which lack the alignment with language at multi-granularity levels. To address this issue, in this paper, we leverage hyperbolic space, which inherently models hierarchical levels and thus provides a principled framework for bridging the granularity gap between visual and textual modalities at an arbitrary granularity level. Concretely, we propose an efficient training paradigm for MLLMs, dubbed as \blg, which can optimize visual representations to align with their textual counterparts at an arbitrary granularity level through dynamic hyperbolic radius adjustment in hyperbolic space.
Forecasting in Offline Reinforcement Learning for Non-stationary Environments
Offline Reinforcement Learning (RL) provides a promising avenue for training policies from pre-collected datasets when gathering additional interaction data is infeasible. However, existing offline RL methods often assume stationarity or only consider synthetic perturbations at test time, assumptions that often fail in real-world scenarios characterized by abrupt, time-varying offsets. These offsets can lead to partial observability, causing agents to misperceive their true state and degrade performance. To overcome this challenge, we introduce Forecasting in Non-stationary Offline RL (FORL), a framework that unifies (i) conditional diffusion-based candidate state generation, trained without presupposing any specific pattern of future non-stationarity, and (ii) zero-shot time-series foundation models. FORL targets environments prone to unexpected, potentially non-Markovian offsets, requiring robust agent performance from the onset of each episode. Empirical evaluations on offline RL benchmarks, augmented with real-world time-series data to simulate realistic non-stationarity, demonstrate that FORL consistently improves performance compared to competitive baselines. By integrating zero-shot forecasting with the agent's experience, we aim to bridge the gap between offline RL and the complexities of real-world, non-stationary environments.
GUARDIAN: Safeguarding LLM Multi-Agent Collaborations with Temporal Graph Modeling
The emergence of large language models (LLMs) enables the development of intelligent agents capable of engaging in complex and multi-turn dialogues. However, multi-agent collaboration faces critical safety challenges, such as hallucination amplification and error injection and propagation. This paper presents GUARDIAN, a unified method for detecting and mitigating multiple safety concerns in GUARDing Intelligent Agent collaboratioNs. By modeling the multi-agent collaboration process as a discrete-time temporal attributed graph, GUARDIAN explicitly captures the propagation dynamics of hallucinations and errors. The unsupervised encoder-decoder architecture incorporating an incremental training paradigm learns to reconstruct node attributes and graph structures from latent embeddings, enabling the identification of anomalous nodes and edges with unparalleled precision. Moreover, we introduce a graph abstraction mechanism based on the Information Bottleneck Theory, which compresses temporal interaction graphs while preserving essential patterns. Extensive experiments demonstrate GUARDIAN's effectiveness in safeguarding LLM multi-agent collaborations against diverse safety vulnerabilities, achieving state-of-the-art accuracy with efficient resource utilization.