MASSIVE Multilingual Abstract Meaning Representation: A Dataset and Baselines for Hallucination Detection
Reviewed by Pithpith:IAVF4TKGopen to challenge →
read the original abstract
Abstract Meaning Representation (AMR) is a semantic formalism that captures the core meaning of an utterance. There has been substantial work developing AMR corpora in English and more recently across languages, though the limited size of existing datasets and the cost of collecting more annotations are prohibitive. With both engineering and scientific questions in mind, we introduce MASSIVE-AMR, a dataset with more than 84,000 text-to-graph annotations, currently the largest and most diverse of its kind: AMR graphs for 1,685 information-seeking utterances mapped to 50+ typologically diverse languages. We describe how we built our resource and its unique features before reporting on experiments using large language models for multilingual AMR and SPARQL parsing as well as applying AMRs for hallucination detection in the context of knowledge base question answering, with results shedding light on persistent issues using LLMs for structured parsing.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 1 Pith paper
-
SWAN: Semantic Watermarking with Abstract Meaning Representation
SWAN uses AMR to embed semantic watermarks that persist through paraphrases, matching SOTA detection on original text and improving AUC by 13.9 points on paraphrased RealNews data.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.