Overview of TREC 2024 Biomedical Generative Retrieval (BioGen) Track

November 27, 2024 ยท The Cartographer ยท ๐Ÿ› Text Retrieval Conference

๐Ÿ“š THE CARTOGRAPHER: The Cartographer
Survey/review paper โ€” maps the landscape rather than implementing a method.

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"Title-pattern auto-detect: Overview of TREC 2024 Biomedical Generative Retrieval (BioGen) Track"

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Authors Deepak Gupta, Dina Demner-Fushman, William Hersh, Steven Bedrick, Kirk Roberts arXiv ID 2411.18069 Category cs.IR: Information Retrieval Citations 10 Venue Text Retrieval Conference Last Checked 3 days ago
Abstract
With the advancement of large language models (LLMs), the biomedical domain has seen significant progress and improvement in multiple tasks such as biomedical question answering, lay language summarization of the biomedical literature, clinical note summarization, etc. However, hallucinations or confabulations remain one of the key challenges when using LLMs in the biomedical and other domains. Inaccuracies may be particularly harmful in high-risk situations, such as medical question answering, making clinical decisions, or appraising biomedical research. Studies on the evaluation of the LLMs abilities to ground generated statements in verifiable sources have shown that models perform significantly worse on lay-user-generated questions, and often fail to reference relevant sources. This can be problematic when those seeking information want evidence from studies to back up the claims from LLMs. Unsupported statements are a major barrier to using LLMs in any applications that may affect health. Methods for grounding generated statements in reliable sources along with practical evaluation approaches are needed to overcome this barrier. Towards this, in our pilot task organized at TREC 2024, we introduced the task of reference attribution as a means to mitigate the generation of false statements by LLMs answering biomedical questions.
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