Papers
arxiv:2601.02179

Confidence Estimation for LLMs in Multi-turn Interactions

Published on Jan 5
· Submitted by
Caiqi Zhang
on Jan 6
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Abstract

Multi-turn conversation confidence estimation lacks systematic evaluation frameworks, prompting the introduction of novel metrics and a "Hinter-Guesser" paradigm for controlled dataset generation to improve calibration and monotonicity.

AI-generated summary

While confidence estimation is a promising direction for mitigating hallucinations in Large Language Models (LLMs), current research dominantly focuses on single-turn settings. The dynamics of model confidence in multi-turn conversations, where context accumulates and ambiguity is progressively resolved, remain largely unexplored. Reliable confidence estimation in multi-turn settings is critical for many downstream applications, such as autonomous agents and human-in-the-loop systems. This work presents the first systematic study of confidence estimation in multi-turn interactions, establishing a formal evaluation framework grounded in two key desiderata: per-turn calibration and monotonicity of confidence as more information becomes available. To facilitate this, we introduce novel metrics, including a length-normalized Expected Calibration Error (InfoECE), and a new "Hinter-Guesser" paradigm for generating controlled evaluation datasets. Our experiments reveal that widely-used confidence techniques struggle with calibration and monotonicity in multi-turn dialogues. We propose P(Sufficient), a logit-based probe that achieves comparatively better performance, although the task remains far from solved. Our work provides a foundational methodology for developing more reliable and trustworthy conversational agents.

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In this paper, we explore the confidence estimation in a new paradigm: multi-turn interactions! Check it out!

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