AIFeb 10, 2025

Can We Trust AI Benchmarks? An Interdisciplinary Review of Current Issues in AI Evaluation

arXiv:2502.06559v256 citationsh-index: 12Proceedings of the AAAI/ACM Conference on AI, Ethics, and Society
Originality Synthesis-oriented
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This is an incremental review that addresses the problem of unreliable AI evaluation for researchers, developers, and regulators, emphasizing the need for improved accountability in benchmarking.

The paper reviews about 100 studies to identify shortcomings in AI benchmarking practices, highlighting issues like dataset biases, inadequate documentation, and systemic flaws such as misaligned incentives and construct validity problems, which undermine trust in benchmarks.

Quantitative Artificial Intelligence (AI) Benchmarks have emerged as fundamental tools for evaluating the performance, capability, and safety of AI models and systems. Currently, they shape the direction of AI development and are playing an increasingly prominent role in regulatory frameworks. As their influence grows, however, so too does concerns about how and with what effects they evaluate highly sensitive topics such as capabilities, including high-impact capabilities, safety and systemic risks. This paper presents an interdisciplinary meta-review of about 100 studies that discuss shortcomings in quantitative benchmarking practices, published in the last 10 years. It brings together many fine-grained issues in the design and application of benchmarks (such as biases in dataset creation, inadequate documentation, data contamination, and failures to distinguish signal from noise) with broader sociotechnical issues (such as an over-focus on evaluating text-based AI models according to one-time testing logic that fails to account for how AI models are increasingly multimodal and interact with humans and other technical systems). Our review also highlights a series of systemic flaws in current benchmarking practices, such as misaligned incentives, construct validity issues, unknown unknowns, and problems with the gaming of benchmark results. Furthermore, it underscores how benchmark practices are fundamentally shaped by cultural, commercial and competitive dynamics that often prioritise state-of-the-art performance at the expense of broader societal concerns. By providing an overview of risks associated with existing benchmarking procedures, we problematise disproportionate trust placed in benchmarks and contribute to ongoing efforts to improve the accountability and relevance of quantitative AI benchmarks within the complexities of real-world scenarios.

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