Survey of Hallucination in Natural Language Generation

Ziwei Ji(Hong Kong University of Science and Technology), Nayeon Lee(Hong Kong University of Science and Technology), Rita Frieske(Hong Kong University of Science and Technology), Tiezheng Yu(Hong Kong University of Science and Technology), Dan Su(Hong Kong University of Science and Technology), Yan Xu(Hong Kong University of Science and Technology), Etsuko Ishii(Hong Kong University of Science and Technology), Ye Jin Bang(Hong Kong University of Science and Technology), Andrea Madotto(Hong Kong University of Science and Technology), Pascale Fung(Hong Kong University of Science and Technology)
ACM Computing Surveys
November 17, 2022
Cited by 3,354

Abstract

Natural Language Generation (NLG) has improved exponentially in recent years thanks to the development of sequence-to-sequence deep learning technologies such as Transformer-based language models. This advancement has led to more fluent and coherent NLG, leading to improved development in downstream tasks such as abstractive summarization, dialogue generation, and data-to-text generation. However, it is also apparent that deep learning based generation is prone to hallucinate unintended text, which degrades the system performance and fails to meet user expectations in many real-world scenarios. To address this issue, many studies have been presented in measuring and mitigating hallucinated texts, but these have never been reviewed in a comprehensive manner before. In this survey, we thus provide a broad overview of the research progress and challenges in the hallucination problem in NLG. The survey is organized into two parts: (1) a general overview of metrics, mitigation methods, and future directions, and (2) an overview of task-specific research progress on hallucinations in the following downstream tasks, namely abstractive summarization, dialogue generation, generative question answering, data-to-text generation, and machine translation. This survey serves to facilitate collaborative efforts among researchers in tackling the challenge of hallucinated texts in NLG.


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