Evaluating large language models’ ability to generate interpretive arguments

Zaid Marji, John Licato
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Abstract

In natural language understanding, a crucial goal is correctly interpreting open-textured phrases. In practice, disagreements over the meanings of open-textured phrases are often resolved through the generation and evaluation of interpretive arguments, arguments designed to support or attack a specific interpretation of an expression within a document. In this paper, we discuss some of our work towards the goal of automatically generating and evaluating interpretive arguments. We have curated a set of rules from the code of ethics of various professional organizations and a set of associated scenarios that are ambiguous with respect to some open-textured phrase within the rule. We collected and evaluated arguments from both human annotators and state-of-the-art generative language models in order to determine the relative quality and persuasiveness of both sets of arguments. Finally, we performed a Turing test-inspired study in order to assess whether human annotators can tell the difference between human arguments and machine-generated arguments. The results show that machine-generated arguments, when prompted a certain way, can be consistently rated as more convincing than human-generated arguments, and to the untrained eye, the machine-generated arguments can convincingly sound human-like.
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评估大型语言模型生成解释性论据的能力
在自然语言理解中,正确理解开放式短语是一个至关重要的目标。在实践中,关于开放式短语含义的分歧通常通过生成和评估解释性论据来解决,这些论据旨在支持或攻击文档中表达的特定解释。在本文中,我们将讨论我们为实现自动生成和评估解释性论据这一目标所做的一些工作。我们从各种专业组织的道德规范中整理出了一套规则,并整理出了一套相关的场景,这些场景在规则中的某些开放式短语方面存在歧义。我们收集并评估了来自人类注释者和最先进的生成语言模型的论据,以确定两组论据的相对质量和说服力。最后,我们进行了一项由图灵测试启发的研究,以评估人类注释者能否区分人类论据和机器生成的论据。结果表明,机器生成的论据在按一定方式提示时,会被一致评为比人类生成的论据更有说服力,而且在未经训练的人看来,机器生成的论据听起来像人类的论据,令人信服。
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A tribute to Trevor Bench-Capon (1953–2024) ω-Groundedness of argumentation and completeness of grounded dialectical proof procedures Evaluating large language models’ ability to generate interpretive arguments Annotated insights into legal reasoning: A dataset of Article 6 ECHR cases The third and fourth international competitions on computational models of argumentation: Design, results and analysis
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