English

Proper Scoring Rules for Agentic Uncertainty Quantification

Artificial Intelligence 2026-05-26 v1

Abstract

Language-model agents increasingly emit uncertainty signals throughout a trajectory, but existing agentic UQ evaluations often conflate ranking usefulness with probabilistic truthfulness. AUROC, AUPRC, risk-coverage, Trajectory ECE, and scalarized trajectory scores evaluate discrimination, binwise calibration, or collapsed summaries, but do not strictly elicit the full prefix-conditioned success-probability trace qt=Pπ(Y=1Ht)q_t = P^{\pi}(Y=1 | H_t). Building on prequential proper scoring, we introduce the Trajectory Proper Score (TPS), a predictor-agnostic family of strictly proper trajectory-level scoring rules for any per-step uncertainty signal calibrated into a probability of eventual success. We prove that TPS strictly elicits the success-probability process under complete observation, within the chosen score family and weight schedule. We extend the construction to administratively censored trajectories by projecting the complete-data score onto the observable stopped prefix, yielding an exact qZq_Z-weighted reduced score and a tractable approximation when qZq_Z is unestimated. We further show that common trajectory evaluators target weaker objects than the full prefix-conditioned probability process: Trajectory ECE is resolution-blind, while scalarized Trajectory Brier elicits only the collapsed scalar, not the full trace. Experiments on StrategyQA, Tau2-Bench, HotpotQA, and WebShop show that these theoretical distinctions are operationally visible: probability recalibration can substantially change TPS while leaving rank metrics nearly unchanged, and the tractable censored approximation can change the verdict relative to complete-only evaluation.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2605.24756,
  title  = {Proper Scoring Rules for Agentic Uncertainty Quantification},
  author = {Suresh Raghu and Satwik Pandey and Shashwat Pandey},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2605.24756},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

38 pages, 2 figures