Beyond the Illusion of Consensus: From Surface Heuristics to Knowledge-Grounded Evaluation in LLM-as-a-Judge
This addresses the problem of unreliable evaluation in LLM-as-a-judge systems for AI researchers and practitioners, offering an incremental improvement through knowledge-driven rubric generation.
The paper challenges the assumption that high inter-evaluator agreement in LLM-as-a-judge indicates reliable evaluation, showing that consensus is often illusory due to reliance on surface heuristics, and demonstrates that dynamically generating knowledge-grounded rubrics improves assessment, with agreement increasing by up to 27% in codified domains.
The paradigm of LLM-as-a-judge relies on a critical assumption, namely that high inter-evaluator agreement indicates reliable and objective evaluation. We present two complementary findings that challenge this assumption. \textbf{First}, we demonstrate that this consensus is frequently illusory. We identify and formalize \textbf{Evaluation Illusion}, a phenomenon where LLM judges generate sophisticated critiques yet anchor scores on shared surface heuristics rather than substantive quality. Through a large-scale study of 105,600 evaluation instances (32 LLMs $\times$ 3 frontier judges $\times$ 100 tasks $\times$ 11 temperatures), we show that model-level agreement (Spearman $ρ= 0.99$) masks fragile sample-level agreement (Pearson $\bar{r} = 0.72$; absolute agreement ICC $= 0.67$), that merely sharing rubric structure restores 62\% of total agreement, and that high-quality outputs paradoxically receive the \textit{least} consistent evaluations. \textbf{Second}, we demonstrate that dynamically generating evaluation rubrics grounded in domain knowledge produces more meaningful assessment. We introduce MERG (Metacognitive Enhanced Rubric Generation), a knowledge-driven rubric generation framework whose domain-selective effects confirm this. Agreement \textit{increases} in codified domains (Education +22\%, Academic +27\%) where knowledge anchors evaluators on shared standards, while it decreases in subjective domains where genuine evaluative pluralism emerges. These findings suggest that evaluation rubrics should be dynamically enriched with expert knowledge rather than relying on generic criteria, with implications for reward modeling in RLAIF.