We introduce SelfCite, a novel self-supervised approach that aligns LLMs to generate high-quality, fine-grained, sentence-level citations for the statements in their generated responses. Instead of only relying on costly and labor-intensive annotations, SelfCite leverages a reward signal provided by the LLM itself through context ablation: If a citation is necessary, removing the cited text from the context should prevent the same response; if sufficient, retaining the cited text alone should preserve the same response. This reward can guide the inference-time best-of-N sampling strategy to improve citation quality significantly, as well as be used in preference optimization to directly fine-tune the models for generating better citations. The effectiveness of SelfCite is demonstrated by increasing citation F1 up to 5.3 points on the LongBench-Cite benchmark across five long-form question answering tasks.
SelfCite: Self-Supervised Alignment for Context Attribution in Large Language Models
SelfCite is a self-supervised method that uses context ablation to align LLMs for generating high-quality, sentence-level citations, improving citation quality and F1 scores on long-form question answering tasks.
- Year
- 2025
- Venue
- arXiv 2025
- Authors
- 9
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/2502.09604ARXIV-DEFAULT
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