CLAILGApr 21, 2023

ReCEval: Evaluating Reasoning Chains via Correctness and Informativeness

arXiv:2304.10703v2175 citationsh-index: 85Has Code
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the need for better evaluation metrics in natural language processing, particularly for reasoning tasks, though it is incremental as it builds on existing methods like natural language inference models.

The paper tackles the problem of evaluating multi-step reasoning chains in natural language tasks by proposing ReCEval, a framework that assesses correctness and informativeness, and shows it effectively identifies errors and improves downstream task performance.

Multi-step reasoning ability is fundamental to many natural language tasks, yet it is unclear what constitutes a good reasoning chain and how to evaluate them. Most existing methods focus solely on whether the reasoning chain leads to the correct conclusion, but this answer-oriented view may confound reasoning quality with other spurious shortcuts to predict the answer. To bridge this gap, we evaluate reasoning chains by viewing them as informal proofs that derive the final answer. Specifically, we propose ReCEval (Reasoning Chain Evaluation), a framework that evaluates reasoning chains via two key properties: (1) correctness, i.e., each step makes a valid inference based on information contained within the step, preceding steps, and input context, and (2) informativeness, i.e., each step provides new information that is helpful towards deriving the generated answer. We evaluate these properties by developing metrics using natural language inference models and V-Information. On multiple datasets, we show that ReCEval effectively identifies various error types and yields notable improvements compared to prior methods. We analyze the impact of step boundaries, and previous steps on evaluating correctness and demonstrate that our informativeness metric captures the expected flow of information in high-quality reasoning chains. Finally, we show that scoring reasoning chains based on ReCEval improves downstream task performance. Our code is publicly available at: https://github.com/archiki/ReCEval

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