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Main Authors: de Oliveira, Bryan L. M., Martins, Luana G. B., Brandão, Bruno, Melo, Luckeciano C.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.12257
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author de Oliveira, Bryan L. M.
Martins, Luana G. B.
Brandão, Bruno
Melo, Luckeciano C.
author_facet de Oliveira, Bryan L. M.
Martins, Luana G. B.
Brandão, Bruno
Melo, Luckeciano C.
contents Large language models excel at following explicit instructions, but they often struggle with ambiguous or incomplete user requests, defaulting to verbose, generic responses instead of seeking clarification. We introduce InfoQuest, a multi-turn chat benchmark designed to evaluate how dialogue agents handle hidden context in open-ended user requests. This benchmark presents intentionally ambiguous scenarios that require models to engage in information-seeking dialogue by asking clarifying questions before providing appropriate responses. Our evaluation of both open and closed models reveals that, while proprietary models generally perform better, all current assistants struggle to gather critical information effectively. They often require multiple turns to infer user intent and frequently default to generic responses without proper clarification. We provide a systematic methodology for generating diverse scenarios and evaluating models' information-seeking capabilities, which can be leveraged to automatically generate data for self-improvement. We also offer insights into the current limitations of language models in handling ambiguous requests through multi-turn interactions.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2502_12257
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle InfoQuest: Evaluating Multi-Turn Dialogue Agents for Open-Ended Conversations with Hidden Context
de Oliveira, Bryan L. M.
Martins, Luana G. B.
Brandão, Bruno
Melo, Luckeciano C.
Computation and Language
Machine Learning
Large language models excel at following explicit instructions, but they often struggle with ambiguous or incomplete user requests, defaulting to verbose, generic responses instead of seeking clarification. We introduce InfoQuest, a multi-turn chat benchmark designed to evaluate how dialogue agents handle hidden context in open-ended user requests. This benchmark presents intentionally ambiguous scenarios that require models to engage in information-seeking dialogue by asking clarifying questions before providing appropriate responses. Our evaluation of both open and closed models reveals that, while proprietary models generally perform better, all current assistants struggle to gather critical information effectively. They often require multiple turns to infer user intent and frequently default to generic responses without proper clarification. We provide a systematic methodology for generating diverse scenarios and evaluating models' information-seeking capabilities, which can be leveraged to automatically generate data for self-improvement. We also offer insights into the current limitations of language models in handling ambiguous requests through multi-turn interactions.
title InfoQuest: Evaluating Multi-Turn Dialogue Agents for Open-Ended Conversations with Hidden Context
topic Computation and Language
Machine Learning
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.12257