Compute-Constrained Data Selection
Abstract
Data selection can reduce the amount of training data needed to finetune LLMs; however, the efficacy of data selection scales directly with its compute. Motivated by the practical challenge of compute-constrained finetuning, we consider the setting in which both the cost of selecting data and training are budgeted for. We first formalize the problem of data selection with a cost-aware utility function, and model the data selection problem as trading off initial-selection cost for training gain. We run a comprehensive sweep of experiments across multiple tasks, varying compute budget by scaling finetuning tokens, model sizes, and data selection compute. Interestingly we find that many powerful data selection methods are almost never compute-optimal, and that cheaper data selection alternatives dominate both from a theoretical and empirical perspective. For compute-optimal training, we find that perplexity and gradient data selection require training-to-selection model size ratios of 5x and 10x, respectively.
Cite
Text
Yin and Rush. "Compute-Constrained Data Selection." International Conference on Learning Representations, 2025.Markdown
[Yin and Rush. "Compute-Constrained Data Selection." International Conference on Learning Representations, 2025.](https://mlanthology.org/iclr/2025/yin2025iclr-computeconstrained/)BibTeX
@inproceedings{yin2025iclr-computeconstrained,
title = {{Compute-Constrained Data Selection}},
author = {Yin, Junjie and Rush, Alexander M},
booktitle = {International Conference on Learning Representations},
year = {2025},
url = {https://mlanthology.org/iclr/2025/yin2025iclr-computeconstrained/}
}