Yujia Gong

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2papers

2 Papers

96.5CRMar 19Code
CNT: Safety-oriented Function Reuse across LLMs via Cross-Model Neuron Transfer

Yue Zhao, Yujia Gong, Ruigang Liang et al.

The widespread deployment of large language models (LLMs) calls for post-hoc methods that can flexibly adapt models to evolving safety requirements. Meanwhile, the rapidly expanding open-source LLM ecosystem has produced a diverse collection of models that already exhibit various safety-related functionalities. This motivates a shift from constructing safety functionality from scratch to reusing existing functionality from external models, thereby avoiding costly data collection and training procedures. In this paper, we present Cross-Model Neuron Transfer (CNT), a post-hoc method that reuses safety-oriented functionality by transferring a minimal subset of neurons from an open-source donor LLM to a target LLM. By operating at the neuron level, CNT enables modular function-level adaptation, supporting both function addition andfunction deletion. We evaluate CNT on seven popular LLMs across three representative applications: safety disalignment, alignment enhancement, and bias removal. Experimental results show that CNT achieves targeted safety-oriented functionality transfer with minimal performance degradation (less than 1% for most models), consistently outperforming five baselines, demonstrating its generality and practical effectiveness.

CLDec 27, 2023
LLM Factoscope: Uncovering LLMs' Factual Discernment through Inner States Analysis

Jinwen He, Yujia Gong, Kai Chen et al.

Large Language Models (LLMs) have revolutionized various domains with extensive knowledge and creative capabilities. However, a critical issue with LLMs is their tendency to produce outputs that diverge from factual reality. This phenomenon is particularly concerning in sensitive applications such as medical consultation and legal advice, where accuracy is paramount. In this paper, we introduce the LLM factoscope, a novel Siamese network-based model that leverages the inner states of LLMs for factual detection. Our investigation reveals distinguishable patterns in LLMs' inner states when generating factual versus non-factual content. We demonstrate the LLM factoscope's effectiveness across various architectures, achieving over 96% accuracy in factual detection. Our work opens a new avenue for utilizing LLMs' inner states for factual detection and encourages further exploration into LLMs' inner workings for enhanced reliability and transparency.