TasksSotADatasetsPapersMethodsSubmitAbout
Papers With Code 2

A community resource for machine learning research: papers, code, benchmarks, and state-of-the-art results.

Explore

Notable BenchmarksAll SotADatasetsPapersMethods

Community

Submit ResultsAbout

Data sourced from the PWC Archive (CC-BY-SA 4.0). Built by the community, for the community.

Papers/GenerationPrograms: Fine-grained Attribution with Executab...

GenerationPrograms: Fine-grained Attribution with Executable Programs

David Wan, Eran Hirsch, Elias Stengel-Eskin, Ido Dagan, Mohit Bansal

2025-06-17Question AnsweringText GenerationLong Form Question AnsweringMulti-Document SummarizationDocument Summarization
PaperPDFCode(official)

Abstract

Recent large language models (LLMs) achieve impressive performance in source-conditioned text generation but often fail to correctly provide fine-grained attributions for their outputs, undermining verifiability and trust. Moreover, existing attribution methods do not explain how and why models leverage the provided source documents to generate their final responses, limiting interpretability. To overcome these challenges, we introduce a modular generation framework, GenerationPrograms, inspired by recent advancements in executable "code agent" architectures. Unlike conventional generation methods that simultaneously generate outputs and attributions or rely on post-hoc attribution, GenerationPrograms decomposes the process into two distinct stages: first, creating an executable program plan composed of modular text operations (such as paraphrasing, compression, and fusion) explicitly tailored to the query, and second, executing these operations following the program's specified instructions to produce the final response. Empirical evaluations demonstrate that GenerationPrograms significantly improves attribution quality at both the document level and sentence level across two long-form question-answering tasks and a multi-document summarization task. We further demonstrate that GenerationPrograms can effectively function as a post-hoc attribution method, outperforming traditional techniques in recovering accurate attributions. In addition, the interpretable programs generated by GenerationPrograms enable localized refinement through modular-level improvements that further enhance overall attribution quality.

Related Papers

From Roots to Rewards: Dynamic Tree Reasoning with RL2025-07-17Enter the Mind Palace: Reasoning and Planning for Long-term Active Embodied Question Answering2025-07-17Vision-and-Language Training Helps Deploy Taxonomic Knowledge but Does Not Fundamentally Alter It2025-07-17City-VLM: Towards Multidomain Perception Scene Understanding via Multimodal Incomplete Learning2025-07-17Making Language Model a Hierarchical Classifier and Generator2025-07-17Describe Anything Model for Visual Question Answering on Text-rich Images2025-07-16Is This Just Fantasy? Language Model Representations Reflect Human Judgments of Event Plausibility2025-07-16Mitigating Object Hallucinations via Sentence-Level Early Intervention2025-07-16