From Relevance to Utility: Evidence Retrieval with Feedback for Fact Verification (2310.11675v2)
Abstract: Retrieval-enhanced methods have become a primary approach in fact verification (FV); it requires reasoning over multiple retrieved pieces of evidence to verify the integrity of a claim. To retrieve evidence, existing work often employs off-the-shelf retrieval models whose design is based on the probability ranking principle. We argue that, rather than relevance, for FV we need to focus on the utility that a claim verifier derives from the retrieved evidence. We introduce the feedback-based evidence retriever(FER) that optimizes the evidence retrieval process by incorporating feedback from the claim verifier. As a feedback signal we use the divergence in utility between how effectively the verifier utilizes the retrieved evidence and the ground-truth evidence to produce the final claim label. Empirical studies demonstrate the superiority of FER over prevailing baselines.
- Hengran Zhang (6 papers)
- Ruqing Zhang (60 papers)
- Jiafeng Guo (161 papers)
- Maarten de Rijke (261 papers)
- Yixing Fan (55 papers)
- Xueqi Cheng (274 papers)