arXiv — NLP / Computation & Language · · 3 min read

Understanding Why Language Models Hallucinate: Testing Reasoning Against Priors

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Computer Science > Computation and Language

arXiv:2607.00447 (cs)
[Submitted on 1 Jul 2026]

Title:Understanding Why Language Models Hallucinate: Testing Reasoning Against Priors

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Abstract:Large language models often produce hallucinated answers that violate prompt-level constraints. A key diagnostic question is whether these failures reflect missing knowledge, or whether the model has the relevant information but follows the wrong inference path. We study this phenomenon as inference misalignment: a mismatch between the answer supported by the prompt and the answer favored by statistically salient latent associations. We formalize this view with a latent key-task model, in which pretraining-frequency imbalance can cause a shortcut path to dominate the constraint-sensitive path and induce positive inference loss. The framework predicts two failure modes: task-retrieval bias in entity disambiguation and key-selection bias in action choice. We introduce TrapQA, a controlled diagnostic testbed with two components. ScientistQA tests disambiguation among similar scientists with supplementary factual probes, while Real-Life Constrained QA tests everyday constraint following under salient shortcuts. Our results show that hallucination can arise from biased latent inference rather than absent knowledge alone.
Comments: Project page: this https URL
Subjects: Computation and Language (cs.CL)
Cite as: arXiv:2607.00447 [cs.CL]
  (or arXiv:2607.00447v1 [cs.CL] for this version)
  https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2607.00447
arXiv-issued DOI via DataCite (pending registration)

Submission history

From: Yangfan Hu [view email]
[v1] Wed, 1 Jul 2026 05:02:43 UTC (1,233 KB)
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