Who's Asking? Evaluating LLM Robustness to Inquiry Personas in Factual Question Answering
Akpinar, Nil-Jana, Lee, Chia-Jung, Murdock, Vanessa, Perona, Pietro
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Large Language Models (LLMs) should answer factual questions truthfully, grounded in objective knowledge, regardless of user context such as self-disclosed personal information, or system personalization. In this paper, we present the first systematic evaluation of LLM robustness to inquiry personas, i.e. user profiles that convey attributes like identity, expertise, or belief. While prior work has primarily focused on adversarial inputs or distractors for robustness testing, we evaluate plausible, human-centered inquiry persona cues that users disclose in real-world interactions. We find that such cues can meaningfully alter QA accuracy and trigger failure modes such as refusals, hallucinated limitations, and role confusion. These effects highlight how model sensitivity to user framing can compromise factual reliability, and position inquiry persona testing as an effective tool for robustness evaluation.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Oct-16-2025
- Country:
- Asia
- Europe
- Austria > Vienna (0.14)
- Croatia > Dubrovnik-Neretva County
- Dubrovnik (0.04)
- Denmark > Capital Region
- Copenhagen (0.04)
- Germany (0.04)
- Greece (0.04)
- Netherlands > South Holland
- Delft (0.04)
- North America
- Canada
- British Columbia > Metro Vancouver Regional District
- Vancouver (0.04)
- Ontario > Toronto (0.04)
- British Columbia > Metro Vancouver Regional District
- Dominican Republic (0.04)
- Mexico > Mexico City
- Mexico City (0.04)
- United States
- California (0.04)
- District of Columbia > Washington (0.04)
- Florida > Miami-Dade County
- Miami (0.04)
- Hawaii > Honolulu County
- Honolulu (0.04)
- Louisiana > Orleans Parish
- New Orleans (0.04)
- New York > New York County
- New York City (0.04)
- Virginia (0.04)
- Washington > King County
- Seattle (0.04)
- Canada
- South America > Colombia (0.04)
- Genre:
- Research Report > New Finding (1.00)
- Industry:
- Education
- Curriculum > Subject-Specific Education (0.93)
- Educational Setting (0.93)
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area
- Neurology > Parkinson's Disease (0.46)
- Information Technology (1.00)
- Education
- Technology: