Do LLMs Act as Repositories of Causal Knowledge?

Abstract

Large language models (LLMs) offer the potential to automate a large number of tasks that previously have not been possible to automate, including some in science. There is considerable interest in whether LLMs can automate the process of causal inference by providing the information about causal links necessary to build a structural model. We use the case of confounding in the Coronary Drug Project (CDP), for which there are several studies listing expert-selected confounders that can serve as a ground truth. LLMs exhibit mediocre performance in identifying confounders in this setting, even though text about the ground truth is in their training data. Variables that experts identify as confounders are only slightly more likely to be labeled as confounders by LLMs compared to variables that experts consider non-confounders. Further, LLM judgment on confounder status is highly inconsistent across models, prompts, and irrelevant concerns like multiple-choice option ordering. LLMs do not yet have the ability to automate the reporting of causal links.

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