ACL2025
Rethinking Prompt-based Debiasing in Large Language Model
Xinyi Yang, Runzhe Zhan, Shu Yang, Junchao Wu, Lidia S. Chao, Derek F. Wong
Abstract
Investigating bias in large language models (LLMs) is crucial for developing trustworthy AI. While prompt-based through prompt engineering is common, its effectiveness relies on the assumption that models inherently understand biases. Our study systematically analyzed this assumption using the BBQ and Stere-oSet benchmarks on both open-source models as well as commercial GPT model. Experimental results indicate that prompt-based is often superficial; for instance, the Llama2-7B-Chat model misclassified over 90% of unbiased content as biased, despite achieving high accuracy in identifying bias issues on the BBQ dataset. Additionally, specific evaluation and question settings in bias benchmarks often lead LLMs to choose "evasive answers", disregarding the core of the question and the relevance of the response to the context. Moreover, the apparent success of previous methods may stem from flawed evaluation metrics. Our research highlights a potential "false prosperity" in promptbase efforts and emphasizes the need to rethink bias metrics to ensure truly trustworthy AI. Warning: This paper contains text that may be offensive or toxic.