hallucinate
English edit
Etymology edit
From Latin hallūcinātus, alternative form of alūcinātus, from alūcināri (to dream).
Pronunciation edit
Verb edit
hallucinate (third-person singular simple present hallucinates, present participle hallucinating, simple past and past participle hallucinated)
- (transitive, intransitive) To seem to perceive things (with one or more of one's senses) which are not really present; to have visions; to experience a hallucination.
- Synonyms: imagine, see things
- (artificial intelligence, of a model) To produce factually invalid information; to interpolate.
- 2021 September 14, Nouha Dziri, Andrea Madotto, Osmar Zaiane, Avishek Joey Bose, “Neural Path Hunter: Reducing Hallucination in Dialogue Systems via Path Grounding”, in arXiv:2104.08455 [cs][1], :
- Despite maintaining plausible general linguistic capabilities, dialogue models are still unable to fully discern facts and may instead hallucinate factually invalid information.
Derived terms edit
Related terms edit
Translations edit
seem to perceive what is not really present
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References edit
- “hallucinate”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.