Prompt-based methods may underestimate large language models' linguistic generalizations
Jennifer Hu, Roger Levy
October 2023
 

Prompting is now a dominant method for evaluating the linguistic knowledge of large language models (LLMs). While other methods directly read out models' probability distributions over strings, prompting requires models to access this internal information by processing linguistic input, thereby implicitly testing a new type of emergent ability: metalinguistic judgment. In this study, we compare metalinguistic prompting and direct probability measurements as ways of measuring models' linguistic knowledge. Broadly, we find that LLMs' metalinguistic judgments are inferior to quantities directly derived from representations. Furthermore, consistency gets worse as the prompt query diverges from direct measurements of next-word probabilities. Our findings suggest that negative results relying on metalinguistic prompts cannot be taken as conclusive evidence that an LLM lacks a particular linguistic generalization. Our results also highlight the value that is lost with the move to closed APIs where access to probability distributions is limited.
Format: [ pdf ]
Reference: lingbuzz/007313
(please use that when you cite this article)
Published in:
keywords: language models, large language models, prompting, probability, syntax, semantics, semantics, syntax
previous versions: v1 [May 2023]
Downloaded:1131 times

 

[ edit this article | back to article list ]