Manifold-Aligned Counterfactual Explanations for Neural Networks
Georgia Perakis, Wei Sun, et al.
AISTATS 2024
Large language models (LLMs) exhibit remarkable generative capabilities but raise ethical and security concerns by memorizing sensitive data, reinforcing biases, and producing harmful content. These risks have spurred interest in LLM unlearning, the task of removing knowledge associated with undesirable data from pre-trained models. However, most existing methods assume access to clean, well-defined forget data samples, whereas real-world forget data could often be low-quality, synthetically rewritten, or watermarked, casting doubt on the reliability of unlearning. This work presents the first study of unlearning under perturbed or low-fidelity forget data, referred to as noisy forget sets. By systematically benchmarking state-of-the-art LLM unlearning methods, RMU and NPO, on such noisy forget sets, we find that unlearning remains surprisingly robust to perturbations, provided that core semantic signals are preserved. To explain this robustness, we propose a saliency-based interpretation: key semantic components that drive forgetting remain consistently influential despite substantial variation in surface form. This suggests that unlearning algorithms are primarily guided by deep semantic cues rather than shallow lexical patterns.
Georgia Perakis, Wei Sun, et al.
AISTATS 2024
Ioana Baldini Soares, Chhavi Yadav, et al.
ACL 2023
Akifumi Wachi, Yanan Sui
ICML 2020
Omid Aramoon, Pin-Yu Chen, et al.
ICML 2020