Sleep & Wellness Guide
On-Policy Self-Distillation with Sampled Demonstrations Reduces Output Diversity
Key Takeaway
A robotics research paper on On-Policy Self-Distillation with Sampled Demonstrations Reduces Output Diversity.
Practical Tips
Practical tips and how-to guidance will be added by our editorial team.
中文解读
中文解读待补充:本站将优先为睡眠改善、失眠治疗、助眠方法等高价值文章补充中文说明。
Article Summary
On-policy self-distillation achieves strong pass@1 accuracy by using a single model as both teacher and student, with the teacher conditioned on a correct demonstration to provide dense token-level feedback. We show that this could come at a hidden cost: rollout diversity decreases and pass@k curves flatten (i.e., generating more rollouts fails to improve accuracy). We trace this to compounding biases in the design of self-distillation with sampled demonstrations. The teacher scores each student rollout while conditioned on a sampled correct rollout, channeling its feedback through the model's own biases. We theoretically analyze the optimal self-distillation policy and show that it tilts the base distribution by a pointwise conditional mutual information score between the student's rollout and the correct rollout used as context. Unlike the ideal optimal on-policy reinforcement learning (RL), which preserves probability ratios among equally correct rollouts, self-distillation can amplify existing probability gaps, concentrating mass on already-dominant modes. On a controlled graph path-finding task and science question-answering benchmarks, self-distilled models match or exceed RL on average performance but exhibit substantially lower functional and semantic diversity, failing on out-of-distribution settings that require diverse strategies.
Sources & References
Need to track a shipment?
Use our free logistics tracking tool to check real-time delivery status for USPS, FedEx, UPS, DHL, Amazon and 1000+ carriers worldwide.
Track a Package Now
Comments