Researcher profile

Rushi Qiang

Rushi Qiang contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Exploration-Driven Optimization for Test-Time Large Language Model Reasoning

Post-training techniques combined with inference-time scaling significantly enhance the reasoning and alignment capabilities of large language models (LLMs). However, a fundamental tension arises: inference-time methods benefit from diverse sampling from a relatively flattened probability distribution, whereas reinforcement learning (RL)-based post-training inherently sharpens these distributions. To address this, we propose Exploration-Driven Optimization (EDO), which extends reward-biasing style exploration objectives to iterative post-training and integrates them into standard RL objectives, encouraging greater diversity in sampled solutions while facilitating more effective inference-time computation. We incorporate EDO into iterative Direct Preference Optimization (iDPO) and Group Relative Policy Optimization (GRPO), resulting in two variants: ED-iDPO and ED-GRPO. Extensive experiments demonstrate that both ED-iDPO and ED-GRPO exhibit greater solution diversity and improved reasoning abilities, particularly when combined with test-time computation techniques like self-consistency. Across three in-distribution reasoning benchmarks, EDO achieves a 1.0-1.3\% improvement over the strongest baselines, and delivers an additional 1.5\% average gain on five out-of-distribution tasks. Beyond accuracy, EDO preserves model entropy and stabilizes RL training dynamics, highlighting its effectiveness in preventing over-optimization collapse. Taken together, these results establish EDO as a practical framework for balancing exploration and exploitation in LLM reasoning, especially in settings that rely on test-time scaling.

preprint2026arXiv

Revisiting DAgger in the Era of LLM-Agents

Long-horizon LM agents learn from multi-turn interaction, where a single early mistake can alter the subsequent state distribution and derail the whole trajectory. Existing recipes fall short in complementary ways: supervised fine-tuning provides dense teacher supervision but suffers from covariate shift because it is trained on off-policy teacher trajectories; while reinforcement learning with verifiable rewards avoids this off-policy mismatch by learning from on-policy rollouts but with only sparse outcome feedback. We address this dilemma by revisiting Dataset Aggregation (DAgger) for multi-turn LM agents: the algorithm collects trajectories through a turn-level interpolation of student and teacher policies, and the student is then trained on these trajectories using supervised labels provided by the teacher. By directly interacting with environments, we expose the model to realistic states likely to be encountered during deployment, thereby effectively mitigating covariate shift. Besides, since the student is learned by mimicking the teacher's behavior, it receives rich feedback during learning. To demonstrate DAgger enjoys the benefits of both worlds, we tested the algorithm to train a software-engineering agent with 4B- and 8B-scale student models. On SWE-bench Verified, our DAgger-style training improves over the strongest post-training baseline by +3.9 points at 4B and +3.6 points at 8B. The resulting 4B agent reaches 27.3%, outperforming representative published 8B SWE-agent systems, while the 8B agent achieves 29.8%, surpassing SWE-Gym-32B and coming within 5 points of stronger 32B-scale agents. Together with consistent gains on the held-out SWE-Gym split, these results suggest the effectiveness of DAgger for modern long-horizon LM agents.