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On Second Thought, Let's Not Think Step by Step! Bias and Toxicity in Zero-Shot Reasoning

Zero-shot Chain of Thought reasoning in sensitive domains increases the likelihood of harmful outputs, but this effect diminishes with better instruction following.

Year
2022
Venue
arXiv 2022
Authors
5
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arxiv.org/abs/2212.08061v2ARXIV-DEFAULT
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Abstract

Generating a Chain of Thought (CoT) has been shown to consistently improve large language model (LLM) performance on a wide range of NLP tasks. However, prior work has mainly focused on logical reasoning tasks (e.g. arithmetic, commonsense QA); it remains unclear whether improvements hold for more diverse types of reasoning, especially in socially situated contexts. Concretely, we perform a controlled evaluation of zero-shot CoT across two socially sensitive domains: harmful questions and stereotype benchmarks. We find that zero-shot CoT reasoning in sensitive domains significantly increases a model's likelihood to produce harmful or undesirable output, with trends holding across different prompt formats and model variants. Furthermore, we show that harmful CoTs increase with model size, but decrease with improved instruction following. Our work suggests that zero-shot CoT should be used with caution on socially important tasks, especially when marginalized groups or sensitive topics are involved.

Authors

5