https://arxiv.org/abs/2309.11495

Abstract

Generation of plausible yet incorrect factual information, termed hallucination, is an unsolved issue in large language models. We study the ability of language models to deliberate on the responses they give in order to correct their mistakes. We develop the Chain-of-Verification (CoVe) method whereby the model first (i) drafts an initial response; then (ii) plans verification questions to fact-check its draft; (iii) answers those questions independently so the answers are not biased by other responses; and (iv) generates its final verified response. In experiments, we show CoVe decreases hallucinations across a variety of tasks, from list-based questions from Wikidata, closed book MultiSpanQA and longform text

https://i.imgur.com/TDXcdMI.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/XfRVxJT.jpeg

Conclusion

We introduced Chain-of-Verification (CoVe), an approach to reduce hallucinations in a large language model by deliberating on its own responses and self-correcting them. In particular, we showed that models are able to answer verification questions with higher accuracy than when answering the original query by breaking down the verification into a set of simpler questions. Secondly, when answering the set of verification questions, we showed that controlling the attention of the model so that it cannot attend to its previous answers (factored CoVe) helps alleviate copying the same hallucinations. Overall, our method provides substantial performance gains over the original language model response just by asking the same model to deliberate on (verify) its answer. An obvious extension to our work is to equip CoVe with tool-use, e.g., to use retrieval augmentation in the verification execution step which would likely bring further gains.

Source: https://old.reddit.com/r/singularity/comments/16qcdsz/research_paper_meta_chainofverification_reduces/

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