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Reward Modeling

TRL supports custom reward modeling for anyone to perform reward modeling on their dataset and model.

Check out a complete flexible example inside examples/scripts folder.

Expected dataset format

The reward trainer expects a very specific format for the dataset. Since the model will be trained to predict which sentence is the most relevant, given two sentences. We provide an example from the Anthropic/hh-rlhf dataset below:

Therefore the final dataset object should contain two 4 entries at least if you use the default RewardDataCollatorWithPadding data collator. The entries should be named:

  • input_ids_chosen
  • attention_mask_chosen
  • input_ids_rejected
  • attention_mask_rejected

The j and k suffixes are used to denote the two sentences in the paired dataset.

Using the RewardTrainer

After standardizing your dataset, you can use the RewardTrainer as a classic Model Database Trainer. You should pass an AutoModelForSequenceClassification model to the RewardTrainer.

Leveraging the peft library to train a reward model

Just pass a peft_config in the key word arguments of RewardTrainer, and the trainer should automatically take care of converting the model into a PEFT model!

from peft import LoraConfig, task_type
from transformers import AutoModelForSequenceClassification, AutoTokenizer, TrainingArguments
from trl import RewardTrainer

model = AutoModelForSequenceClassification.from_pretrained("gpt2")
peft_config = LoraConfig(
    task_type=TaskType.SEQ_CLS,
    inference_mode=False,
    r=8,
    lora_alpha=32,
    lora_dropout=0.1,
)

...

trainer = RewardTrainer(
    model=model,
    args=training_args,
    tokenizer=tokenizer,
    train_dataset=dataset,
    peft_config=peft_config,
)

trainer.train()

RewardTrainer

class trl.RewardTrainer

< >

( model: typing.Union[transformers.modeling_utils.PreTrainedModel, torch.nn.modules.module.Module] = None args: TrainingArguments = None data_collator: typing.Optional[DataCollator] = None train_dataset: typing.Optional[datasets.arrow_dataset.Dataset] = None eval_dataset: typing.Union[datasets.arrow_dataset.Dataset, typing.Dict[str, datasets.arrow_dataset.Dataset], NoneType] = None tokenizer: typing.Optional[transformers.tokenization_utils_base.PreTrainedTokenizerBase] = None model_init: typing.Union[typing.Callable[[], transformers.modeling_utils.PreTrainedModel], NoneType] = None compute_metrics: typing.Union[typing.Callable[[transformers.trainer_utils.EvalPrediction], typing.Dict], NoneType] = None callbacks: typing.Optional[typing.List[transformers.trainer_callback.TrainerCallback]] = None optimizers: typing.Tuple[torch.optim.optimizer.Optimizer, torch.optim.lr_scheduler.LambdaLR] = (None, None) preprocess_logits_for_metrics: typing.Union[typing.Callable[[torch.Tensor, torch.Tensor], torch.Tensor], NoneType] = None max_length: typing.Optional[int] = None peft_config: typing.Optional[typing.Dict] = None )

The RewardTrainer can be used to train your custom Reward Model. It is a subclass of the transformers.Trainer class and inherits all of its attributes and methods. It is recommended to use an AutoModelForSequenceClassification as the reward model. The reward model should be trained on a dataset of paired examples, where each example is a tuple of two sequences. The reward model should be trained to predict which example in the pair is more relevant to the task at hand.

The reward trainer expects a very specific format for the dataset. The dataset should contain two 4 entries at least if you don’t use the default RewardDataCollatorWithPadding data collator. The entries should be named

  • input_ids_chosen
  • attention_mask_chosen
  • input_ids_rejected
  • attention_mask_rejected