Generative Large language models (LLMs) have demonstrated remarkable capabilities for a wide range of applications, but reducing ungrounded or erroneous responses remains a major growth area. Unlike task-specific models, there lack an effective method to calibrate the confidence level of LLM responses to indicate potential errors and facilitate human-in-the-loop verification. An important source of calibration stems from expert-stipulated programmatic supervision, which is often available at low cost but has its own limitations such as noise and coverage. In this paper, we introduce a Pareto optimal self-supervision framework that can leverage available programmatic supervision to systematically calibrate LLM responses by producing a risk score for every LLM response, without any additional manual efforts. This is accomplished by learning a harmonizer model to align with LLM output as well as other weak supervision sources. The model assigns higher risk scores to more uncertain LLM responses and facilitate error correction. Experiments on standard relation extraction and classification tasks in biomedical and general domains demonstrate that the proposed risk score is highly correlated with the actual LLM error rate. By using a dynamic prompting strategy based on the risk score, we observed significant accuracy improvement for off-the-shelf LLMs, boosting GPT-3.5 results past state-of-the-art (SOTA) weak supervision model and GPT-4 results past SOTA supervised results on challenging evaluation datasets.
翻译:暂无翻译