CLJul 28, 2025

When Scale Meets Diversity: Evaluating Language Models on Fine-Grained Multilingual Claim Verification

arXiv:2507.20700v13 citationsh-index: 41Proceedings of the Eighth Fact Extraction and VERification Workshop (FEVER)
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge of automated fact verification across diverse languages for combating misinformation, though it is incremental as it focuses on benchmarking existing models.

The paper tackled the problem of multilingual claim verification with fine-grained categories, finding that the small XLM-R model (270M parameters) outperformed larger LLMs (7-12B parameters) by achieving 57.7% macro-F1, a 15.8% improvement over the previous state-of-the-art.

The rapid spread of multilingual misinformation requires robust automated fact verification systems capable of handling fine-grained veracity assessments across diverse languages. While large language models have shown remarkable capabilities across many NLP tasks, their effectiveness for multilingual claim verification with nuanced classification schemes remains understudied. We conduct a comprehensive evaluation of five state-of-the-art language models on the X-Fact dataset, which spans 25 languages with seven distinct veracity categories. Our experiments compare small language models (encoder-based XLM-R and mT5) with recent decoder-only LLMs (Llama 3.1, Qwen 2.5, Mistral Nemo) using both prompting and fine-tuning approaches. Surprisingly, we find that XLM-R (270M parameters) substantially outperforms all tested LLMs (7-12B parameters), achieving 57.7% macro-F1 compared to the best LLM performance of 16.9%. This represents a 15.8% improvement over the previous state-of-the-art (41.9%), establishing new performance benchmarks for multilingual fact verification. Our analysis reveals problematic patterns in LLM behavior, including systematic difficulties in leveraging evidence and pronounced biases toward frequent categories in imbalanced data settings. These findings suggest that for fine-grained multilingual fact verification, smaller specialized models may be more effective than general-purpose large models, with important implications for practical deployment of fact-checking systems.

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