tante<p><strong>It’s all hallucinations</strong></p><p></p><p>The discourse on “AI” systems, chat bots, “assistants” and “research helpers” is defined by a lot of future promises. Those systems are disfunctional or at least not working great <em>right now</em> but there’s the promise of things getting better in the future.</p><p>Which is how we often perceive tech to work: Early versions might be a bit wonky, but there’s constant iteration and work going on to improve systems to be more capable, more robust and maybe even cheaper at some point.</p><p>The most pressing problem for many modern “AI” systems, especially the generative systems that are all the rage these days are so-called “hallucinations” which is a term describing when an AI system generates incorrect information. Think a research agent inventing a paper to quote from that doesn’t exist for example (Google’s AI assistant telling you to put glue on pizza is not a hallucination in that regard because that is just regurgitating <a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/Pizza/comments/1a19s0/my_cheese_slides_off_the_pizza_too_easily/" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">information from Reddit</a> that every toddler would recognize as a joke). Hallucinations are the big issue that many researchers are trying to address – which mixed results. Methods like RAG are shifting the probabilities a bit but are still not solving the problem: Hallucinations keep happening.</p><p>But I think that this discourse misses an important thing: <em>Anything an LLM generates is a hallucination.</em> </p><p>That doesn’t mean that everything LLMs generate is incorrect, far from it. What I am referencing is what hallucinations are actually defined as: A <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hallucination" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">hallucination</a> is a perception you have that is not connected to any actual stimulus. You hallucinate when you perceive something in the world that you have no sensor data for. </p><p>The term hallucination itself is an anthropomorphization of those statistical systems. They don’t “know”, or “think” or “lie” or do any such things. They iteratively calculate the most probable set of words and characters based on the original data. But if we look at how it is applied to “AI”s I think there is a big misunderstanding because it creates a difference between true and false statements that just isn’t there.</p><p>For humans we separate “real perceptions” from hallucinations by the link to sensor data/stimulants: If there is an actual stimulant of you feeling a touch it’s real, if you just think you are being touched, it’s a hallucination. But for LLMs that distinction is <em>meaningless</em>. </p><p>A line of text that is true has – for the LLM – absolutely no different quality than one that is false. There is no link to reality, no sensor data or anchoring, there’s just the data one was trained on (that also doesn’t necessarily have any connection to reality). If using the term hallucination is useful to describe LLM output it is to illustrate the quality of <em>all output</em>. Everything an LLM generates is a hallucination, some just might accidentally be true.</p><p>And in that understanding the terminology might actually be enlightening, might actually help people understand what those systems are doing and where it might be appropriate to use and – more importantly – where not.</p> Liked it? Take a second to support tante on Patreon! <p><a rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" href="https://www.patreon.com/tante?utm_content=post_button&utm_medium=patron_button_and_widgets_plugin&utm_campaign=78367&utm_term=&utm_source=https://tante.cc/2025/03/16/its-all-hallucinations/" target="_blank"></a></p> <p></p><p><a rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/" target="_blank"></a>This work is licensed under a <a rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/" target="_blank">Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License</a>.</p><p></p><p><a rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" class="hashtag u-tag u-category" href="https://tante.cc/tag/ai/" target="_blank">#ai</a> <a rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" class="hashtag u-tag u-category" href="https://tante.cc/tag/hallucination/" target="_blank">#hallucination</a></p>