CLSEAug 19, 2023

PACE: Improving Prompt with Actor-Critic Editing for Large Language Model

Peking U
arXiv:2308.10088v235 citationsh-index: 28
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge of reducing human effort in prompt engineering for LLM users, though it is an incremental improvement over existing methods.

The paper tackles the problem of performance variability in large language models due to prompt quality by proposing PACE, an automatic prompt editing method that improves medium/low-quality human-written prompts by up to 98% relative performance, making them comparable to high-quality prompts.

Large language models (LLMs) have showcased remarkable potential across various tasks by conditioning on prompts. However, the quality of different human-written prompts leads to substantial discrepancies in LLMs' performance, and improving prompts usually necessitates considerable human effort and expertise. To this end, this paper proposes Prompt with Actor-Critic Editing (PACE) for LLMs to enable automatic prompt editing. Drawing inspiration from the actor-critic algorithm in reinforcement learning, PACE leverages LLMs as the dual roles of actors and critics, conceptualizing prompt as a type of policy. PACE refines prompt, taking into account the feedback from both actors performing prompt and critics criticizing response. This process helps LLMs better align prompt to a specific task, thanks to real responses and thinking from LLMs. We conduct extensive experiments on 24 instruction induction tasks and 21 big-bench tasks. Experimental results indicate that PACE elevates the relative performance of medium/low-quality human-written prompts by up to 98\%, which has comparable performance to high-quality human-written prompts. Moreover, PACE also exhibits notable efficacy for prompt generation.

Foundations

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