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add more explanations
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@ -154,10 +154,11 @@
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},
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"source": [
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"- In the equation above,\n",
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" - \"expected value\" $\\mathbb{E}$ is statistics jargon and stands for the average or mean value of the random variable (the expression inside the brackets)\n",
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" - The $\\pi_{\\theta}$ variable is the so-called policy (a term borrowed from reinforcement learning) and represents the LLM we want to optimize; $\\pi_{ref}$ is a reference LLM, which is typically the original LLM before optimization (at the beginning of the training, $\\pi_{\\theta}$ and $\\pi_{ref}$ are typically the same)\n",
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" - $\\beta$ is a hyperparameter to control the divergence between the $\\pi_{\\theta}$ and the reference model; increasing $\\beta$ increases the impact of the difference between\n",
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" - \"expected value\" $\\mathbb{E}$ is statistics jargon and stands for the average or mean value of the random variable (the expression inside the brackets); optimizing $-\\mathbb{E}$ aligns the model better with user preferences\n",
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" - The $\\pi_{\\theta}$ variable is the so-called policy (a term borrowed from reinforcement learning) and represents the LLM we want to optimize; $\\pi_{ref}$ is a reference LLM, which is typically the original LLM before optimization (at the beginning of the training, $\\pi_{\\theta}$ and $\\pi_{ref}$ are typically the same)\n",
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" - $\\beta$ is a hyperparameter to control the divergence between the $\\pi_{\\theta}$ and the reference model; increasing $\\beta$ increases the impact of the difference between\n",
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"$\\pi_{\\theta}$ and $\\pi_{ref}$ in terms of their log probabilities on the overall loss function, thereby increasing the divergence between the two models\n",
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" - the logistic sigmoid function, $\\log \\sigma(\\centerdot)$ transforms the log-odds of the preferred and rejected responses (the terms inside the logistic sigmoid function) into a log-probability score \n",
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"- To avoid bloating the code notebook with a more detailed discussion, I may write a separate standalone article with more details on these concepts in the future\n",
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"- In the meantime, if you are interested in comparing RLHF and DPO, please see the section [2.2. RLHF vs Direct Preference Optimization (DPO)](https://magazine.sebastianraschka.com/i/142924793/rlhf-vs-direct-preference-optimization-dpo) in my article [Tips for LLM Pretraining and Evaluating Reward Models](https://magazine.sebastianraschka.com/p/tips-for-llm-pretraining-and-evaluating-rms)"
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]
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@ -3088,7 +3089,7 @@
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"name": "python",
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"nbconvert_exporter": "python",
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"pygments_lexer": "ipython3",
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"version": "3.10.6"
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"version": "3.11.4"
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}
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},
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"nbformat": 4,
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