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Main Authors: Mehenni, Gaya, Lamarche, Fabrice, Rios-Ibacache, Odette, Kildea, John, Zouaq, Amal
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.08596
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author Mehenni, Gaya
Lamarche, Fabrice
Rios-Ibacache, Odette
Kildea, John
Zouaq, Amal
author_facet Mehenni, Gaya
Lamarche, Fabrice
Rios-Ibacache, Odette
Kildea, John
Zouaq, Amal
contents We present MedHal, a novel large-scale dataset specifically designed to evaluate if models can detect hallucinations in medical texts. Current hallucination detection methods face significant limitations when applied to specialized domains like medicine, where they can have disastrous consequences. Existing medical datasets are either too small, containing only a few hundred samples, or focus on a single task like Question Answering or Natural Language Inference. MedHal addresses these gaps by: (1) incorporating diverse medical text sources and tasks; (2) providing a substantial volume of annotated samples suitable for training medical hallucination detection models; and (3) including explanations for factual inconsistencies to guide model learning. We demonstrate MedHal's utility by training and evaluating a baseline medical hallucination detection model, showing improvements over general-purpose hallucination detection approaches. This resource enables more efficient evaluation of medical text generation systems while reducing reliance on costly expert review, potentially accelerating the development of medical AI research.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2504_08596
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle MedHal: An Evaluation Dataset for Medical Hallucination Detection
Mehenni, Gaya
Lamarche, Fabrice
Rios-Ibacache, Odette
Kildea, John
Zouaq, Amal
Computation and Language
Artificial Intelligence
I.2.7
We present MedHal, a novel large-scale dataset specifically designed to evaluate if models can detect hallucinations in medical texts. Current hallucination detection methods face significant limitations when applied to specialized domains like medicine, where they can have disastrous consequences. Existing medical datasets are either too small, containing only a few hundred samples, or focus on a single task like Question Answering or Natural Language Inference. MedHal addresses these gaps by: (1) incorporating diverse medical text sources and tasks; (2) providing a substantial volume of annotated samples suitable for training medical hallucination detection models; and (3) including explanations for factual inconsistencies to guide model learning. We demonstrate MedHal's utility by training and evaluating a baseline medical hallucination detection model, showing improvements over general-purpose hallucination detection approaches. This resource enables more efficient evaluation of medical text generation systems while reducing reliance on costly expert review, potentially accelerating the development of medical AI research.
title MedHal: An Evaluation Dataset for Medical Hallucination Detection
topic Computation and Language
Artificial Intelligence
I.2.7
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.08596