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Towards Automated Fact-Checking of Real-World Claims: Exploring Task Formulation and Assessment with LLMs (2502.08909v1)

Published 13 Feb 2025 in cs.CL and cs.AI

Abstract: Fact-checking is necessary to address the increasing volume of misinformation. Traditional fact-checking relies on manual analysis to verify claims, but it is slow and resource-intensive. This study establishes baseline comparisons for Automated Fact-Checking (AFC) using LLMs across multiple labeling schemes (binary, three-class, five-class) and extends traditional claim verification by incorporating analysis, verdict classification, and explanation in a structured setup to provide comprehensive justifications for real-world claims. We evaluate Llama-3 models of varying sizes (3B, 8B, 70B) on 17,856 claims collected from PolitiFact (2007-2024) using evidence retrieved via restricted web searches. We utilize TIGERScore as a reference-free evaluation metric to score the justifications. Our results show that larger LLMs consistently outperform smaller LLMs in classification accuracy and justification quality without fine-tuning. We find that smaller LLMs in a one-shot scenario provide comparable task performance to fine-tuned Small LLMs (SLMs) with large context sizes, while larger LLMs consistently surpass them. Evidence integration improves performance across all models, with larger LLMs benefiting most. Distinguishing between nuanced labels remains challenging, emphasizing the need for further exploration of labeling schemes and alignment with evidences. Our findings demonstrate the potential of retrieval-augmented AFC with LLMs.

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Authors (6)
  1. Premtim Sahitaj (3 papers)
  2. Iffat Maab (3 papers)
  3. Junichi Yamagishi (178 papers)
  4. Jawan Kolanowski (1 paper)
  5. Sebastian Möller (77 papers)
  6. Vera Schmitt (8 papers)