Designing LLM Chains by Adapting Techniques from Crowdsourcing Workflows

December 18, 2023 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› ACM Trans. Comput. Hum. Interact.

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Authors Madeleine Grunde-McLaughlin, Michelle S. Lam, Ranjay Krishna, Daniel S. Weld, Jeffrey Heer arXiv ID 2312.11681 Category cs.HC: Human-Computer Interaction Cross-listed cs.AI, cs.CL Citations 28 Venue ACM Trans. Comput. Hum. Interact. Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
LLM chains enable complex tasks by decomposing work into a sequence of subtasks. Similarly, the more established techniques of crowdsourcing workflows decompose complex tasks into smaller tasks for human crowdworkers. Chains address LLM errors analogously to the way crowdsourcing workflows address human error. To characterize opportunities for LLM chaining, we survey 107 papers across the crowdsourcing and chaining literature to construct a design space for chain development. The design space covers a designer's objectives and the tactics used to build workflows. We then surface strategies that mediate how workflows use tactics to achieve objectives. To explore how techniques from crowdsourcing may apply to chaining, we adapt crowdsourcing workflows to implement LLM chains across three case studies: creating a taxonomy, shortening text, and writing a short story. From the design space and our case studies, we identify takeaways for effective chain design and raise implications for future research and development.
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