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The Consistency Hypothesis in Uncertainty Quantification for Large Language Models

Computation and Language 2025-06-30 v1 Artificial Intelligence Machine Learning

Abstract

Estimating the confidence of large language model (LLM) outputs is essential for real-world applications requiring high user trust. Black-box uncertainty quantification (UQ) methods, relying solely on model API access, have gained popularity due to their practical benefits. In this paper, we examine the implicit assumption behind several UQ methods, which use generation consistency as a proxy for confidence, an idea we formalize as the consistency hypothesis. We introduce three mathematical statements with corresponding statistical tests to capture variations of this hypothesis and metrics to evaluate LLM output conformity across tasks. Our empirical investigation, spanning 8 benchmark datasets and 3 tasks (question answering, text summarization, and text-to-SQL), highlights the prevalence of the hypothesis under different settings. Among the statements, we highlight the `Sim-Any' hypothesis as the most actionable, and demonstrate how it can be leveraged by proposing data-free black-box UQ methods that aggregate similarities between generations for confidence estimation. These approaches can outperform the closest baselines, showcasing the practical value of the empirically observed consistency hypothesis.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2506.21849,
  title  = {The Consistency Hypothesis in Uncertainty Quantification for Large Language Models},
  author = {Quan Xiao and Debarun Bhattacharjya and Balaji Ganesan and Radu Marinescu and Katsiaryna Mirylenka and Nhan H Pham and Michael Glass and Junkyu Lee},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2506.21849},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

Accepted by The Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence (UAI) 2025

R2 v1 2026-07-01T03:35:38.917Z