Publication | Closed Access
Hallucination Detection: Robustly Discerning Reliable Answers in Large Language Models
78
Citations
14
References
2023
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringPsycholinguisticsLarge Language ModelCorpus LinguisticsText MiningSpeech RecognitionNatural Language ProcessingLarge Language ModelsComputational LinguisticsHallucination DetectionLanguage StudiesMachine TranslationQuestion AnsweringNlp TaskDiverse LlmsDistributional SemanticsRetrieval Augmented GenerationLanguage RecognitionDialogue SystemsLinguisticsLanguage Generation
Large language models (LLMs) have gained widespread adoption in various natural language processing tasks, including question answering and dialogue systems. However, a major drawback of LLMs is the issue of hallucination, where they generate unfaithful or inconsistent content that deviates from the input source, leading to severe consequences. In this paper, we propose a robust discriminator named RelD to effectively detect hallucination in LLMs' generated answers. RelD is trained on the constructed RelQA, a bilingual question-answering dialogue dataset along with answers generated by LLMs and a comprehensive set of metrics. Our experimental results demonstrate that the proposed RelD successfully detects hallucination in the answers generated by diverse LLMs. Moreover, it performs well in distinguishing hallucination in LLMs' generated answers from both in-distribution and out-of-distribution datasets. Additionally, we also conduct a thorough analysis of the types of hallucinations that occur and present valuable insights. This research significantly contributes to the detection of reliable answers generated by LLMs and holds noteworthy implications for mitigating hallucination in the future work.
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