Making Large Language Models Better Data Creators

October 31, 2023 ยท Entered Twilight ยท ๐Ÿ› Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing

๐Ÿ’ค TWILIGHT: Eternal Rest
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Repo contents: .gitignore, CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md, LICENSE, README.md, SECURITY.md, SUPPORT.md, config.py, data, data_creation.py, data_creation_tree.py, data_utils, openai_config.json, openai_utils.py, prompt.py, requirements.txt, script, train.py

Authors Dong-Ho Lee, Jay Pujara, Mohit Sewak, Ryen W. White, Sujay Kumar Jauhar arXiv ID 2310.20111 Category cs.CL: Computation & Language Citations 39 Venue Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing Repository https://github.com/microsoft/llm-data-creation โญ 137 Last Checked 1 month ago
Abstract
Although large language models (LLMs) have advanced the state-of-the-art in NLP significantly, deploying them for downstream applications is still challenging due to cost, responsiveness, control, or concerns around privacy and security. As such, trainable models are still the preferred option in some cases. However, these models still require human-labeled data for optimal performance, which is expensive and time-consuming to obtain. In order to address this issue, several techniques to reduce human effort involve labeling or generating data using LLMs. Although these methods are effective for certain applications, in practice they encounter difficulties in real-world scenarios. Labeling data requires careful data selection, while generating data necessitates task-specific prompt engineering. In this paper, we propose a unified data creation pipeline that requires only a single formatting example, and which is applicable to a broad range of tasks, including traditionally problematic ones with semantically devoid label spaces. In our experiments we demonstrate that instruction-following LLMs are highly cost-effective data creators, and that models trained with these data exhibit performance better than those trained with human-labeled data (by up to 17.5%) on out-of-distribution evaluation, while maintaining comparable performance on in-distribution tasks. These results have important implications for the robustness of NLP systems deployed in the real-world.
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