Multiple Choice Learning of Low-Rank Adapters for Language Modeling
Abstract
We propose LoRA-MCL, a training scheme that extends next-token prediction in language models with a method designed to decode diverse, plausible sentence continuations at inference time. Traditional language modeling is an intrinsically ill-posed problem: given a context, multiple futures may be equally plausible. Our approach leverages Multiple Choice Learning (MCL) and the winner-takes-all loss to efficiently handle ambiguity through Low-Rank Adaptation. We provide a theoretical interpretation of applying MCL to language modeling, assuming the data is generated from a mixture of distributions. We illustrate the proposed approach using mixtures of Markov chains. We then demonstrate with experiments on audio and visual captioning, as well as machine translation, that our method achieves high diversity and relevance in generated outputs. We release the code for applying LoRA-MCL to a wide range of language models.
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