Kevin Liu
2023
Cognitive Dissonance: Why Do Language Model Outputs Disagree with Internal Representations of Truthfulness?
Kevin Liu
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Stephen Casper
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Dylan Hadfield-Menell
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Jacob Andreas
Proceedings of the 2023 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing
Neural language models (LMs) can be used to evaluate the truth of factual statements in two ways: they can be either queried for statement probabilities, or probed for internal representations of truthfulness. Past work has found that these two procedures sometimes disagree, and that probes tend to be more accurate than LM outputs. This has led some researchers to conclude that LMs “lie’ or otherwise encode non-cooperative communicative intents. Is this an accurate description of today’s LMs, or can query–probe disagreement arise in other ways? We identify three different classes of disagreement, which we term confabulation, deception, and heterogeneity. In many cases, the superiority of probes is simply attributable to better calibration on uncertain answers rather than a greater fraction of correct, high-confidence answers. In some cases, queries and probes perform better on different subsets of inputs, and accuracy can further be improved by ensembling the two.
2021
Stanford MLab at SemEval-2021 Task 1: Tree-Based Modelling of Lexical Complexity using Word Embeddings
Erik Rozi
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Niveditha Iyer
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Gordon Chi
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Enok Choe
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Kathy J. Lee
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Kevin Liu
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Patrick Liu
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Zander Lack
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Jillian Tang
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Ethan A. Chi
Proceedings of the 15th International Workshop on Semantic Evaluation (SemEval-2021)
This paper presents our system for the single- and multi-word lexical complexity prediction tasks of SemEval Task 1: Lexical Complexity Prediction. Text comprehension depends on the reader’s ability to understand the words present in it; evaluating the lexical complexity of such texts can enable readers to find an appropriate text and systems to tailor a text to an audience’s needs. We present our model pipeline, which applies a combination of embedding-based and manual features to predict lexical complexity on the CompLex English dataset using various tree-based and linear models. Our method is ranked 27 / 54 on single-word prediction and 14 / 37 on multi-word prediction.
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Co-authors
- Erik Rozi 1
- Niveditha Iyer 1
- Gordon Chi 1
- Enok Choe 1
- Kathy J. Lee 1
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