Share your thoughts, 1 month free Claude Pro on usSee more
WorkDL logo mark

Configurable Reward Model for Balanced Safety Alignment

About

Aligning large language models (LLMs) to heterogeneous and rapidly evolving safety requirements remains a critical challenge. Existing instruction-tuned LLMs and standalone safety classifiers often fail to generalize to new safety configurations, motivating the need for Reward Models (RMs) that are explicitly configurable to changing specifications. We introduce the Configurable Safety Reward Model (CSRM), which is jointly optimized for calibrated safety compliance and reward modeling. Our approach is supported by configuration-targeted data augmentation that enforces instruction adherence while preserving relative severity structure. The resulting RM is sensitive to fine-grained safety configurations and conversational nuances, substantially improving generalization to previously unseen safety configurations. CSRM achieves state-of-the-art performance on recent configurable safety benchmarks, including CoSApien (94.6% F1) and DynaBench (75.8% F1), without requiring additional human annotation. When used for downstream safety alignment, CSRM yields LLMs with a significantly improved helpfulness-safety tradeoff compared to existing baselines.

Zhengping Jiang, Mehran Khodabandeh, Akash Bharadwaj, Manik Bhandari, Mayur Srungarapu, Anqi Liu, Benjamin Van Durme, Li Chen• 2026

Related benchmarks

TaskDatasetResultRank
Safety ClassificationWildGuardMix (test)
F1 Score95.3
47
Safety ClassificationCoSApien (test)
F1 Score94.6
10
Safety ClassificationDynaBench (test)
F1 Score75.8
10
Safety ClassificationOR-Bench
F1 Score83.1
8
Safety AlignmentCoSApien Game Development
Safety0.975
6
Safety AlignmentCoSApien Arab Publisher
Safety76.6
6
Safety AlignmentCoSApien Film Production
Safety Score0.83
6
Safety AlignmentCoSApien
Safety Score99
6
Safety AlignmentCoSApien Public Prosecutor
Safety0.91
6
Response ClassificationXSTest
F1 Score94.1
5
Showing 10 of 10 rows

Other info

Follow for update