Researcher profile

Arnav Arora

Arnav Arora contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

3 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

How Value Induction Reshapes LLM Behaviour

Conversational Large Language Models are post-trained on language that expresses specific behavioural traits, such as curiosity, open-mindedness, and empathy, and values, such as helpfulness, harmlessness, and honesty. This is done to increase utility, ensure safety, and improve the experience of the people interacting with the model. However, values are complex and inter-related -- inducing one could modify behaviour on another. Further, inducing certain values can make models more addictive or sycophantic through language used in the generations, with a potential detrimental effect on the user. We investigate these and other unintended effects of value induction into models. We fine-tune models using curated value subsets of existing preference datasets, measuring the impact of value induction on expression of other values, model safety, anthropomorphic language, and various QA benchmarks. We find that (i) inducing values leads to expression of other related, and sometimes contrastive values, (ii) inducing positive values increases safety, and (iii) all values increase anthropomorphic language use, making models more validating and sycophantic.

preprint2024arXiv

Overview of the 2023 ICON Shared Task on Gendered Abuse Detection in Indic Languages

This paper reports the findings of the ICON 2023 on Gendered Abuse Detection in Indic Languages. The shared task deals with the detection of gendered abuse in online text. The shared task was conducted as a part of ICON 2023, based on a novel dataset in Hindi, Tamil and the Indian dialect of English. The participants were given three subtasks with the train dataset consisting of approximately 6500 posts sourced from Twitter. For the test set, approximately 1200 posts were provided. The shared task received a total of 9 registrations. The best F-1 scores are 0.616 for subtask 1, 0.572 for subtask 2 and, 0.616 and 0.582 for subtask 3. The paper contains examples of hateful content owing to its topic.

preprint2022arXiv

A Survey on Stance Detection for Mis- and Disinformation Identification

Understanding attitudes expressed in texts, also known as stance detection, plays an important role in systems for detecting false information online, be it misinformation (unintentionally false) or disinformation (intentionally false information). Stance detection has been framed in different ways, including (a) as a component of fact-checking, rumour detection, and detecting previously fact-checked claims, or (b) as a task in its own right. While there have been prior efforts to contrast stance detection with other related tasks such as argumentation mining and sentiment analysis, there is no existing survey on examining the relationship between stance detection and mis- and disinformation detection. Here, we aim to bridge this gap by reviewing and analysing existing work in this area, with mis- and disinformation in focus, and discussing lessons learnt and future challenges.