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Performance of the pre-trained large language model GPT-4 on automated short answer grading

Gerd Kortemeyer

2024Discover Artificial Intelligence51 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Automated Short Answer Grading (ASAG) has been an active area of machine-learning research for over a decade. It promises to let educators grade and give feedback on free-form responses in large-enrollment courses in spite of limited availability of human graders. Over the years, carefully trained models have achieved increasingly higher levels of performance. More recently, pre-trained Large Language Models (LLMs) emerged as a commodity, and an intriguing question is how a general-purpose tool without additional training compares to specialized models. We studied the performance of GPT-4 on the standard benchmark 2-way and 3-way datasets SciEntsBank and Beetle, where in addition to the standard task of grading the alignment of the student answer with a reference answer, we also investigated withholding the reference answer. We found that overall, the performance of the pre-trained general-purpose GPT-4 LLM is comparable to hand-engineered models, but worse than pre-trained LLMs that had specialized training.

Topics & Concepts

Grading (engineering)Computer scienceBenchmark (surveying)Machine learningArtificial intelligenceTask (project management)Natural language processingMathematics educationPsychologyEngineeringGeographyCivil engineeringGeodesySystems engineeringTopic ModelingNatural Language Processing TechniquesMultimodal Machine Learning Applications