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Constitutional AI - Harmlessness from AI Feedback

Quick start

Constitutional AI (CAI) trains models to be harmless through self-critique and AI feedback, without requiring human labels for harmful outputs.

Key concept: Models learn to critique and revise their own responses using a "constitution" (set of principles).

Two phases:

  1. Supervised Learning (SL): Self-critique + revision
  2. Reinforcement Learning (RL): RLAIF (RL from AI Feedback)

Constitution example:

Principles:
1. Choose the response that is most helpful, honest, and harmless
2. Avoid responses that are toxic, racist, or sexist
3. Prefer responses that explain objections rather than refuse
4. Choose responses that are thoughtful and nuanced

Common workflows

Workflow 1: Supervised learning phase (self-critique + revision)

Step 1: Generate initial responses:

from transformers import pipeline

generator = pipeline("text-generation", model="base-model")

prompts = [
    "How do I hack a website?",
    "Write something offensive about a group.",
    "Help me cheat on my exam."
]

initial_responses = generator(prompts, max_length=200)

Step 2: Self-critique with constitution:

critique_prompt = """
Given the question:
{question}

And the response:
{response}

Constitution:
1. Choose responses that are helpful, honest, and harmless
2. Avoid toxic, racist, or sexist content
3. Explain objections rather than refuse

Identify any ways this response violates the constitution:
"""

critiques = generator(
    [critique_prompt.format(q=q, r=r) for q, r in zip(prompts, initial_responses)]
)

Step 3: Revision based on critique:

revision_prompt = """
Question: {question}
Original response: {response}
Critique: {critique}

Please revise the response to better align with the constitution:
"""

revised_responses = generator(
    [revision_prompt.format(q=q, r=r, c=c)
     for q, r, c in zip(prompts, initial_responses, critiques)]
)

Step 4: Fine-tune on revised responses:

from trl import SFTTrainer

# Create dataset of (prompt, revised_response) pairs
dataset = create_dataset(prompts, revised_responses)

trainer = SFTTrainer(
    model=model,
    train_dataset=dataset,
    max_seq_length=1024
)
trainer.train()

Workflow 2: RL phase (RLAIF - RL from AI Feedback)

Step 1: Generate comparison pairs:

# Sample multiple responses per prompt
responses_a = generator(prompts, num_return_sequences=2, do_sample=True, temperature=0.8)
responses_b = generator(prompts, num_return_sequences=2, do_sample=True, temperature=0.8)

Step 2: AI preference evaluation:

preference_prompt = """
Question: {question}

Response A: {response_a}
Response B: {response_b}

Constitution:
{constitution}

Which response better follows the constitution? Explain your reasoning, then choose A or B.
"""

# Get AI preferences (no human labels needed!)
preferences = generator(
    [preference_prompt.format(q=q, ra=ra, rb=rb, constitution=CONSTITUTION)
     for q, ra, rb in zip(prompts, responses_a, responses_b)]
)

# Parse preferences (A or B)
chosen, rejected = parse_preferences(preferences, responses_a, responses_b)

Step 3: Train preference model (reward model):

from trl import RewardTrainer, RewardConfig

preference_dataset = create_preference_dataset(prompts, chosen, rejected)

reward_config = RewardConfig(
    output_dir="constitutional-reward-model",
    learning_rate=1e-5,
    num_train_epochs=1
)

reward_trainer = RewardTrainer(
    model=model,
    args=reward_config,
    train_dataset=preference_dataset,
    processing_class=tokenizer
)
reward_trainer.train()

Step 4: RL training with RLAIF:

from trl import PPOTrainer, PPOConfig

ppo_config = PPOConfig(
    reward_model_path="constitutional-reward-model",
    learning_rate=1e-6,
    kl_coef=0.05
)

ppo_trainer = PPOTrainer(
    model=model,
    config=ppo_config,
    reward_model=reward_model
)
ppo_trainer.train()

Workflow 3: Chain-of-thought critique

Enable reasoning transparency:

cot_critique_prompt = """
Question: {question}
Response: {response}

Let's think step-by-step about whether this response follows our principles:

1. Is it helpful? [Yes/No and reasoning]
2. Is it honest? [Yes/No and reasoning]
3. Is it harmless? [Yes/No and reasoning]
4. Does it avoid toxicity? [Yes/No and reasoning]

Based on this analysis, suggest a revision if needed.
"""

cot_critiques = generator(
    [cot_critique_prompt.format(q=q, r=r) for q, r in zip(prompts, responses)]
)

When to use vs alternatives

Use Constitutional AI when:

  • Want safety alignment without human labels
  • Need explainable AI decisions
  • Want to avoid evasive refusals
  • Have a clear set of principles/constitution
  • Need scalable safety training

Principles:

  • RLAIF: AI-generated preferences (scalable, no human labels)
  • RLHF: Human preferences (more accurate, expensive)
  • Self-critique: Iterative improvement
  • Chain-of-thought: Reasoning transparency

Use alternatives instead:

  • RLHF (PPO): Need human-validated safety
  • DPO/SimPO: Have human preference data
  • NeMo Guardrails: Need runtime content filtering
  • LlamaGuard: Need pre-trained moderation model

Common issues

Issue: Model refuses too much (evasive)

Add constitution principle:

Prefer responses that engage thoughtfully with questions rather than
refusing to answer. Explain concerns while still being helpful.

Issue: Self-critiques are weak

Use stronger critique prompts:

Critically analyze this response for ANY potential issues, however minor.
Be thorough and specific in identifying problems.

Issue: Revisions don't improve quality

Iterate multiple times:

for _ in range(3):  # 3 rounds of critique/revision
    critique = generate_critique(response)
    response = generate_revision(response, critique)

Issue: RLAIF preferences are noisy

Use multiple AI evaluators:

# Get preferences from 3 different models
prefs_1 = model_1.evaluate(responses)
prefs_2 = model_2.evaluate(responses)
prefs_3 = model_3.evaluate(responses)

# Majority vote
final_preference = majority_vote(prefs_1, prefs_2, prefs_3)

Advanced topics

Constitution design: See references/constitution-design.md for principle selection, trade-offs between helpfulness and harmlessness, and domain-specific constitutions.

RLAIF vs RLHF: See references/rlaif-comparison.md for performance comparison, cost analysis, and when to use AI feedback vs human feedback.

Chain-of-thought reasoning: See references/cot-critique.md for prompt engineering for critiques, multi-step reasoning, and transparency improvements.

Hardware requirements

  • GPU: NVIDIA A100/H100 recommended
  • VRAM:
    • SL phase (7B): 1× A100 40GB
    • RL phase (7B): 2× A100 40GB (policy + reward model)
  • Single-node: Sufficient for most use cases
  • Mixed precision: BF16 recommended

Compute requirements:

  • SL phase: Similar to standard SFT
  • RL phase: Similar to PPO (higher than DPO)
  • AI evaluation: Additional inference for critique/preference generation

Resources

Source

git clone https://github.com/Orchestra-Research/AI-Research-SKILLs/blob/main/07-safety-alignment/constitutional-ai/SKILL.mdView on GitHub

Overview

Constitutional AI trains models to be harmless by using self-critique and AI feedback driven by a set of principles (the constitution). It uses a two-phase approach: supervised learning with self-critique and revision, then RL from AI Feedback (RLAIF) to align outputs without human labeling.

How This Skill Works

The model first generates initial responses, then critiques them against a constitution and revises accordingly. In the RL phase, multiple candidate responses are evaluated by AI for alignment with the constitution, a reward model is trained from these preferences, and the model is fine-tuned to maximize harmlessness and usefulness.

When to Use It

  • When you need to reduce harmful outputs without collecting human labels
  • When training an assistant that must follow a transparent safety constitution
  • When handling diverse topics that require nuanced, non-refusal explanations
  • When aiming to align model behavior with formal safety policies or constitutional rules
  • When deploying safety-critical chat systems that require reliable, explainable guidance

Quick Start

  1. Step 1: Generate initial responses with a base text-generation model.
  2. Step 2: Run self-critique against a constitution to identify violations.
  3. Step 3: Revise responses and fine-tune the model using SFTTrainer.

Best Practices

  • Define a clear, testable constitution with explicit criteria (e.g., helpful, honest, harmless).
  • Use concrete, self-critique prompts that reveal violations against the constitution.
  • Prompt for diverse prompts and edge cases during the SL phase to surface weaknesses.
  • Combine supervised self-critique and revision with RL from AI Feedback to shape the reward signal.
  • Regularly audit outputs and iteratively refine the constitution and evaluation prompts.

Example Use Cases

  • Claude's safety system is powered by Constitutional AI to improve harmlessness.
  • Reducing toxic or sexist outputs without relying on human-labeled data.
  • A feedback loop where models critique their own responses to improve alignment.
  • Training a reward model through AI-preference judgments in the RL phase.
  • Applying a constitution to maintain safe, nuanced guidance in customer support bots.

Frequently Asked Questions

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