Same Evidence, Different Answer: Auditing Order Sensitivity in Multimodal Large Language Models
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Computer Science > Computation and Language
Title:Same Evidence, Different Answer: Auditing Order Sensitivity in Multimodal Large Language Models
Abstract:Standard benchmarks for multimodal large language models (MLLMs) score each item on one canonical ordering and miss whether order-irrelevant shuffling changes the answer, a baseline reliability property called for by emerging AI evaluation guidelines. We introduce Facet-Probe, a five-facet audit (option, evidence-chunk, document-rank, image-set, and mixed-modality ordering) of 18 frontier and open-weight MLLMs. A Bayesian item-response model separates ordering noise from per-facet bias, and a same-ordering control estimates the decoder-stochastic floor for observed flips. We find that none of the 18 MLLMs we audit are order-invariant: screened per-facet panel-mean flip rates span 24-50%. A Gemini same-ordering control at temperature 0 estimates a substantial ordering excess over a same-input decoder-noise floor in verified cells. Capability predicts but does not eliminate flips; the best model still flips on 13.4% of trials. In our Gemini mitigation tests, training-free prompt changes are modality-conditional and do not transfer from text to visual reasoning. These results suggest that prompt-level mitigation alone is unlikely to provide general order robustness, motivating future work on training-time and architectural approaches. We propose cross-ordering flip rate as a standard reporting axis for MLLMs.
| Comments: | 22 pages, 4 figures, 5 tables |
| Subjects: | Computation and Language (cs.CL); Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (cs.CV); Machine Learning (cs.LG) |
| Cite as: | arXiv:2606.26079 [cs.CL] |
| (or arXiv:2606.26079v1 [cs.CL] for this version) | |
| https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2606.26079
arXiv-issued DOI via DataCite (pending registration)
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