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Main Authors: Dandekar, Sylee, Deshmukh, Shripad, Chiu, Frank, Knox, W. Bradley, Niekum, Scott
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.01692
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author Dandekar, Sylee
Deshmukh, Shripad
Chiu, Frank
Knox, W. Bradley
Niekum, Scott
author_facet Dandekar, Sylee
Deshmukh, Shripad
Chiu, Frank
Knox, W. Bradley
Niekum, Scott
contents Human preferences in RLHF are typically modeled as a function of the human's reward function or corresponding optimal state-action values. In this work, we propose that human beliefs about the capabilities of the agent being trained also play a key role in preference generation. We examine two questions related to this hypothesis, one descriptive and one normative, respectively: Do human labelers' beliefs about agent capabilities affect the preferences that they provide? And what is the ideal set of beliefs about an agent -- and resulting preferences -- for humans to have? We propose a new preference model that incorporates human beliefs and provide a normative theory that bounds the error on the final learned policy based on the \textit{mismatch} between the human's beliefs and an idealized set of beliefs. We then confirm via a human study that beliefs about agent capabilities do, in fact, significantly affect preferences and can be influenced through simple interventions. Additionally, we empirically show through synthetic experiments that it is often suboptimal for human preference labelers to assume agent optimality. Collectively, these results theoretically and empirically demonstrate how reducing the mismatch between human beliefs and agent capabilities can lead to more performant RLHF and point toward new best practices for RLHF practitioners.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2506_01692
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle A Descriptive and Normative Theory of Human Beliefs in RLHF
Dandekar, Sylee
Deshmukh, Shripad
Chiu, Frank
Knox, W. Bradley
Niekum, Scott
Artificial Intelligence
Machine Learning
Human preferences in RLHF are typically modeled as a function of the human's reward function or corresponding optimal state-action values. In this work, we propose that human beliefs about the capabilities of the agent being trained also play a key role in preference generation. We examine two questions related to this hypothesis, one descriptive and one normative, respectively: Do human labelers' beliefs about agent capabilities affect the preferences that they provide? And what is the ideal set of beliefs about an agent -- and resulting preferences -- for humans to have? We propose a new preference model that incorporates human beliefs and provide a normative theory that bounds the error on the final learned policy based on the \textit{mismatch} between the human's beliefs and an idealized set of beliefs. We then confirm via a human study that beliefs about agent capabilities do, in fact, significantly affect preferences and can be influenced through simple interventions. Additionally, we empirically show through synthetic experiments that it is often suboptimal for human preference labelers to assume agent optimality. Collectively, these results theoretically and empirically demonstrate how reducing the mismatch between human beliefs and agent capabilities can lead to more performant RLHF and point toward new best practices for RLHF practitioners.
title A Descriptive and Normative Theory of Human Beliefs in RLHF
topic Artificial Intelligence
Machine Learning
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.01692