Yuanzhu Peter Chen
Also published as: Peter Chen
2024
LLMs cannot find reasoning errors, but can correct them given the error location
Gladys Tyen
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Hassan Mansoor
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Victor Carbune
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Peter Chen
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Tony Mak
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: ACL 2024
While self-correction has shown promise in improving LLM outputs in terms of style and quality (e.g. Chen et al., 2023b; Madaan et al.,2023), recent attempts to self-correct logical or reasoning errors often cause correct answers to become incorrect, resulting in worse performances overall (Huang et al., 2023). In this paper, we show that poor self-correction performance stems from LLMs’ inability tofind logical mistakes, rather than their ability to correct a known mistake. Firstly, we benchmark several state-of-the-art LLMs ontheir mistake-finding ability and demonstrate that they generally struggle with the task, even in highly objective, unambiguous cases. Secondly, we test the correction abilities of LLMs – separately from mistake finding – using a backtracking setup that feeds ground truth mistake location information to the model. We show that this boosts downstream task performance across our 5 reasoning tasks, indicating that LLMs’ correction abilities are robust. Finally, we show that it is possible to obtain mistake location information without ground truth labels or in-domain training data. We train a small classifier with out-of-domain data, which exhibits stronger mistake-finding performance than prompting a large model. We release our dataset of LLM-generated logical mistakes, BIG-Bench Mistake, to enable further research into locating LLM reasoning mistakes.
2018
A Cross-lingual Messenger with Keyword Searchable Phrases for the Travel Domain
Shehroze Khan
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Jihyun Kim
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Tarik Zulfikarpasic
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Peter Chen
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Nizar Habash
Proceedings of the 27th International Conference on Computational Linguistics: System Demonstrations
We present Qutr (Query Translator), a smart cross-lingual communication application for the travel domain. Qutr is a real-time messaging app that automatically translates conversations while supporting keyword-to-sentence matching. Qutr relies on querying a database that holds commonly used pre-translated travel-domain phrases and phrase templates in different languages with the use of keywords. The query matching supports paraphrases, incomplete keywords and some input spelling errors. The application addresses common cross-lingual communication issues such as translation accuracy, speed, privacy, and personalization.
2010
Recommendation in Internet Forums and Blogs
Jia Wang
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Qing Li
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Yuanzhu Peter Chen
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Zhangxi Lin
Proceedings of the 48th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics
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Co-authors
- Gladys Tyen 1
- Hassan Mansoor 1
- Jia Wang 1
- Jihyun Kim 1
- Nizar Habash 1
- show all...