AIDBIRLOMay 20, 2024

Increasing the LLM Accuracy for Question Answering: Ontologies to the Rescue!

arXiv:2405.11706v141 citationsh-index: 19
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the problem of error reduction in LLM-powered QA systems for enterprise data, representing an incremental improvement over prior methods.

The paper tackled improving question-answering accuracy with LLMs by using ontologies to detect and repair errors in generated SPARQL queries, increasing overall accuracy from 54% to 72% and reducing the error rate to 20%.

There is increasing evidence that question-answering (QA) systems with Large Language Models (LLMs), which employ a knowledge graph/semantic representation of an enterprise SQL database (i.e. Text-to-SPARQL), achieve higher accuracy compared to systems that answer questions directly on SQL databases (i.e. Text-to-SQL). Our previous benchmark research showed that by using a knowledge graph, the accuracy improved from 16% to 54%. The question remains: how can we further improve the accuracy and reduce the error rate? Building on the observations of our previous research where the inaccurate LLM-generated SPARQL queries followed incorrect paths, we present an approach that consists of 1) Ontology-based Query Check (OBQC): detects errors by leveraging the ontology of the knowledge graph to check if the LLM-generated SPARQL query matches the semantic of ontology and 2) LLM Repair: use the error explanations with an LLM to repair the SPARQL query. Using the chat with the data benchmark, our primary finding is that our approach increases the overall accuracy to 72% including an additional 8% of "I don't know" unknown results. Thus, the overall error rate is 20%. These results provide further evidence that investing knowledge graphs, namely the ontology, provides higher accuracy for LLM powered question answering systems.

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