LGMar 17

The Finetuner's Fallacy: When to Pretrain with Your Finetuning Data

arXiv:2603.1617799.64 citationsh-index: 71
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge for practitioners in efficiently adapting models to narrow domains with scarce data, offering an incremental improvement over standard finetuning methods.

The paper tackles the problem of overfitting and forgetting in domain-specific model deployments by proposing specialized pretraining (SPT), which repeats domain data during pretraining, resulting in up to 1.75x reduction in pretraining tokens needed for target performance and outperforming larger standard models on underrepresented domains.

Real-world model deployments demand strong performance on narrow domains where data is often scarce. Typically, practitioners finetune models to specialize them, but this risks overfitting to the domain and forgetting general knowledge. We study a simple strategy, specialized pretraining (SPT), where a small domain dataset, typically reserved for finetuning, is repeated starting from pretraining as a fraction of the total tokens. Across three specialized domains (ChemPile, MusicPile, and ProofPile), SPT improves domain performance and preserves general capabilities after finetuning compared to standard pretraining. In our experiments, SPT reduces the pretraining tokens needed to reach a given domain performance by up to 1.75x. These gains grow when the target domain is underrepresented in the pretraining corpus: on domains far from web text, a 1B SPT model outperforms a 3B standard pretrained model. Beyond these empirical gains, we derive overfitting scaling laws to guide practitioners in selecting the optimal domain-data repetition for a given pretraining compute budget. Our observations reveal the finetuner's fallacy: while finetuning may appear to be the cheapest path to domain adaptation, introducing specialized domain data during pretraining stretches its utility. SPT yields better specialized domain performance (via reduced overfitting across repeated exposures) and better general domain performance (via reduced forgetting during finetuning), ultimately achieving stronger results with fewer parameters and less total compute when amortized over inference. To get the most out of domain data, incorporate it as early in training as possible.

Foundations

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