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Main Authors: Anantaprayoon, Panatchakorn, Babina, Nataliia, Asgharbeygi, Nima, Tarifi, Jad
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.10476
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author Anantaprayoon, Panatchakorn
Babina, Nataliia
Asgharbeygi, Nima
Tarifi, Jad
author_facet Anantaprayoon, Panatchakorn
Babina, Nataliia
Asgharbeygi, Nima
Tarifi, Jad
contents LLM alignment has progressed in single-agent settings through paradigms such as RL with human feedback (RLHF), while recent work explores scalable alternatives such as RL with AI feedback (RLAIF) and dynamic alignment objectives. However, these approaches remain limited in multi-stakeholder settings, where conflicting values arise and deliberative negotiation is required. This work proposes a multi-agent negotiation-based alignment framework that aligns LLMs to Collective Agency (CA)-an existing alignment objective introduced to promote the continual expansion of agency-while simultaneously improving conflict-resolution capability. To enable scalable training, two self-play LLM instances are assigned opposing personas and engage in turn-based dialogue to synthesize mutually beneficial solutions. We generate synthetic moral-dilemma prompts and conflicting persona pairs, and optimize the policy via RLAIF using Group Relative Policy Optimization (GRPO) with an external LLM reward model. While rewards are computed from CA scores assigned to the final completion, gradients are applied to dialogue tokens to directly improve deliberative interaction dynamics. Experiments show that the model achieves CA alignment comparable to a single-agent baseline while substantially improving conflict-resolution performance without degrading general language capabilities. These results suggest that negotiation-driven deliberation training provides a practical path toward LLMs that better support collective decision-making in value-conflict scenarios.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_10476
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Learning to Negotiate: Multi-Agent Deliberation for Collective Value Alignment in LLMs
Anantaprayoon, Panatchakorn
Babina, Nataliia
Asgharbeygi, Nima
Tarifi, Jad
Computation and Language
Artificial Intelligence
LLM alignment has progressed in single-agent settings through paradigms such as RL with human feedback (RLHF), while recent work explores scalable alternatives such as RL with AI feedback (RLAIF) and dynamic alignment objectives. However, these approaches remain limited in multi-stakeholder settings, where conflicting values arise and deliberative negotiation is required. This work proposes a multi-agent negotiation-based alignment framework that aligns LLMs to Collective Agency (CA)-an existing alignment objective introduced to promote the continual expansion of agency-while simultaneously improving conflict-resolution capability. To enable scalable training, two self-play LLM instances are assigned opposing personas and engage in turn-based dialogue to synthesize mutually beneficial solutions. We generate synthetic moral-dilemma prompts and conflicting persona pairs, and optimize the policy via RLAIF using Group Relative Policy Optimization (GRPO) with an external LLM reward model. While rewards are computed from CA scores assigned to the final completion, gradients are applied to dialogue tokens to directly improve deliberative interaction dynamics. Experiments show that the model achieves CA alignment comparable to a single-agent baseline while substantially improving conflict-resolution performance without degrading general language capabilities. These results suggest that negotiation-driven deliberation training provides a practical path toward LLMs that better support collective decision-making in value-conflict scenarios.
title Learning to Negotiate: Multi-Agent Deliberation for Collective Value Alignment in LLMs
topic Computation and Language
Artificial Intelligence
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.10476