Optimizing Decomposition for Optimal Claim Verification
Lu, Yining, Ziems, Noah, Dang, Hy, Jiang, Meng
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Current research on the \textit{Decompose-Then-Verify} paradigm for evaluating the factuality of long-form text typically treats decomposition and verification in isolation, overlooking their interactions and potential misalignment. We find that existing decomposition policies, typically hand-crafted demonstrations, do not align well with downstream verifiers in terms of atomicity -- a novel metric quantifying information density -- leading to suboptimal verification results. We formulate finding the optimal decomposition policy for optimal verification as a bilevel optimization problem. To approximate a solution for this strongly NP-hard problem, we propose dynamic decomposition, a reinforcement learning framework that leverages verifier feedback to learn a policy for dynamically decomposing claims to verifier-preferred atomicity. Experimental results show that dynamic decomposition outperforms existing decomposition policies, improving verification confidence by 0.07 and accuracy by 0.12 (on a 0-1 scale) on average across varying verifiers, datasets, and atomcities of input claims.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Mar-19-2025
- Country:
- Asia
- Middle East
- Singapore (0.04)
- Europe > France
- Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur > Bouches-du-Rhône > Marseille (0.04)
- North America
- Canada > Ontario
- Toronto (0.04)
- Mexico > Mexico City
- Mexico City (0.04)
- United States
- Florida > Miami-Dade County
- Miami (0.04)
- Hawaii (0.04)
- Indiana > Saint Joseph County
- South Bend (0.04)
- Louisiana > Orleans Parish
- New Orleans (0.04)
- Minnesota > Hennepin County
- Minneapolis (0.14)
- New York > New York County
- New York City (0.04)
- Florida > Miami-Dade County
- Canada > Ontario
- Asia
- Genre:
- Research Report > New Finding (0.66)
- Industry:
- Leisure & Entertainment (0.93)
- Media > Film (0.93)
- Technology: