LGAICLMar 8

Two-Stage Optimizer-Aware Online Data Selection for Large Language Models

arXiv:2604.000011 citations
Predicted impact top 28% in LG · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of efficient online fine-tuning for LLMs, offering a domain-specific improvement over incremental methods.

The paper tackles the problem of online data selection for fine-tuning large language models by proposing an optimizer-aware framework that treats selection as shaping target-oriented updates under optimizer state, leading to improved convergence and downstream performance over existing baselines.

Gradient-based data selection offers a principled framework for estimating sample utility in large language model (LLM) fine-tuning, but existing methods are mostly designed for offline settings. They are therefore less suited to online fine-tuning, where data arrives sequentially, sample utility is step-dependent, and the effective update geometry is shaped by adaptive optimizers. We propose an optimizer-aware framework for gradient-based online data selection and reweighting in LLM fine-tuning. Our key idea is to view online selection not as static sample ranking, but as shaping the next target-oriented update under the optimizer state. We formulate this as an optimizer-aware update-matching problem, establish its connection to second-order target utility, and show why subset-level construction must account for interactions and redundancy among selected samples. Based on this view, we develop a two-stage Filter-then-Weight algorithm that first filters geometrically useful candidates and then optimizes their coefficients. To make the framework practical for LLMs, we introduce a factorized outer-product gradient representation and optimized matrix computations for long-context data. Experiments show that our method consistently improves convergence and downstream performance over existing online data selection baselines under the same data budget.

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