CLOct 17, 2024

From Single to Multi: How LLMs Hallucinate in Multi-Document Summarization

NVIDIA
arXiv:2410.13961v221 citationsh-index: 14Has CodeNAACL
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of unreliable AI-generated summaries for users of multi-document systems, though it is incremental as it builds on existing hallucination research.

The paper investigates how hallucinations manifest in large language models when summarizing information from multiple documents, finding that up to 75% of content in LLM-generated summaries can be hallucinated, with models like GPT-4o fabricating content about non-existent topics 44% of the time.

Although many studies have investigated and reduced hallucinations in large language models (LLMs) for single-document tasks, research on hallucination in multi-document summarization (MDS) tasks remains largely unexplored. Specifically, it is unclear how the challenges arising from handling multiple documents (e.g., repetition and diversity of information) affect models outputs. In this work, we investigate how hallucinations manifest in LLMs when summarizing topic-specific information from multiple documents. Since no benchmarks exist for investigating hallucinations in MDS, we use existing news and conversation datasets, annotated with topic-specific insights, to create two novel multi-document benchmarks. When evaluating 5 LLMs on our benchmarks, we observe that on average, up to 75% of the content in LLM-generated summary is hallucinated, with hallucinations more likely to occur towards the end of the summaries. Moreover, when summarizing non-existent topic-related information, gpt-3.5-turbo and GPT-4o still generate summaries about 79.35% and 44% of the time, raising concerns about their tendency to fabricate content. To understand the characteristics of these hallucinations, we manually evaluate 700+ insights and find that most errors stem from either failing to follow instructions or producing overly generic insights. Motivated by these observations, we investigate the efficacy of simple post-hoc baselines in mitigating hallucinations but find them only moderately effective. Our results underscore the need for more effective approaches to systematically mitigate hallucinations in MDS. We release our dataset and code at github.com/megagonlabs/Hallucination_MDS.

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