EMNLP 2025

November 05, 2025

Suzhou, China

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Large Vision-Language Models (LVLMs) demonstrate strong visual question answering (VQA) capabilities but are shown to hallucinate. A reliable model should perceive its knowledge boundaries—knowing what it knows and what it does not. This paper investigates LVLMs’ perception of their knowledge boundaries by evaluating three types of confidence signals: probabilistic confidence, answer consistency-based confidence, and verbalized confidence. Experiments on three LVLMs across three VQA datasets show that, although LVLMs possess a reasonable perception level, there is substantial room for improvement. Among the three confidence, probabilistic and consistency-based signals are more reliable indicators, while verbalized confidence often leads to overconfidence. To enhance LVLMs’ perception, we adapt several established confidence calibration methods from Large Language Models (LLMs) and propose three effective methods. Additionally, we compare LVLMs with their LLM counterparts, finding that jointly processing visual and textual inputs decreases question-answering performance but reduces confidence, resulting in improved perception level compared to LLMs.

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MTabVQA: Evaluating Multi-Tabular Reasoning of Language Models in Visual Space

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Jan StrichAnshul SinghChris Biemann
Chris Biemann and 2 other authors

05 November 2025

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