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Current QA systems can generate reasonablesounding yet false answers without explanation or evidence for the generated answer, which is especially problematic when humans cannot readily check the model's answers. This presents a challenge for building trust in machine learning systems. We take inspiration from real-world situations where diffcult questions are answered by considering opposing sides (see For multiplechoice QA examples, we build a dataset of single arguments for both a correct and incorrect answer option in a debate-style set-up as an initial step in training models to produce explanations for two candidate answers. We use long contexts-humans familiar with the context write convincing explanations for preselected correct and incorrect answers, and we test if those explanations allow humans who have not read the full context to more accurately determine the correct answer. We do not fnd that explanations in our set-up improve human accuracy, but a baseline condition shows that providing human-selected text snippets does improve accuracy. We use these fndings to suggest ways of improving the debate set up for future data collection efforts.
Parrish et al. (Sat,) studied this question.