From Tokens to Steps: Verification-Aware Speculative Decoding for Efficient Multi-Step Reasoning
For practitioners deploying LLMs on reasoning tasks, SpecGuard offers a lightweight method to enhance accuracy and efficiency without external reward models.
SpecGuard improves multi-step reasoning accuracy by 3.6% and reduces latency by ~11% compared to standard speculative decoding, using only model-internal signals for step-level verification.
Speculative decoding (SD) accelerates large language model inference by allowing a lightweight draft model to propose outputs that a stronger target model verifies. However, its token-centric nature allows erroneous steps to propagate. Prior approaches mitigate this using external reward models, but incur additional latency, computational overhead, and limit generalizability. We propose SpecGuard, a verification-aware speculative decoding framework that performs step-level verification using only model-internal signals. At each step, SpecGuard samples multiple draft candidates and selects the most consistent step, which is then validated using an ensemble of two lightweight model-internal signals: (i) an attention-based grounding score that measures attribution to the input and previously accepted steps, and (ii) a log-probability-based score that captures token-level confidence. These signals jointly determine whether a step is accepted or recomputed using the target, allocating compute selectively. Experiments across a range of reasoning benchmarks show that SpecGuard improves accuracy by 3.6% while reducing latency by ~11%, outperforming both SD and reward-guided SD.