hallucinate
English
Etymology
From Latin hallūcinātus, alternate form of alūcinātus, from alūcināri (to dream).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /həˈluːsɪneɪt/, /həˈljuːsɪneɪt/
Audio (southern England) (file)
Verb
hallucinate (third-person singular simple present hallucinates, present participle hallucinating, simple past and past participle hallucinated)
- (transitive and 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], :
- Despite maintaining plausible general linguistic capabilities, dialogue models are still unable to fully discern facts and may instead hallucinate factually invalid information.
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Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
seem to perceive what is not really present
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References
- hallucinate at OneLook Dictionary Search
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