Papers
arxiv:2605.26730

PRISM: A Multi-Dimensional Benchmark for Evaluating LLM Peer Reviewers

Published on May 27
· Submitted by
Duy A Nguyen
on May 29
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Abstract

PRISM evaluates automated peer review systems across multiple dimensions using argument mining and retrieval-augmented verification, revealing that while LLMs match human performance in specific areas, no system consistently equals human reviewers across all evaluation criteria.

AI-generated summary

The rapid growth in submissions to machine learning venues has strained the scientific peer-review system and intensified interest in LLM-based automated peer reviewers. However, how good these systems are actually, especially compared to human reviewers at catching scientific gaps, remains poorly understood. In this work, we introduce PRISM (Peer Review Intelligence via Structured Multi-dimensional assessment), a benchmarking framework that evaluates review quality across four dimensions: Depth of Analysis, Novelty Assessment,Flaw Identification & Major Issues Prioritization, and Multi-dimensional Constructiveness. Unlike most existing evaluations based on surface-level metrics like ROUGE and BLEU, or unconstrained LLM-as-a-judge prompting that conflates fluency with rigor, PRISM grounds each dimension in argument mining, retrieval-augmented verification, and consensus-based scoring. We apply PRISM to benchmark five leading automated reviewer systems and human reviewers on a stratified corpus of reviews from ICLR, ICML, and NeurIPS. The results reveal that LLMs can match or beat human reviewers on individual dimensions: comparable depth of analysis, stronger novelty verification, and highly accurate critique prioritization. However, no single system consistently matches the balanced performance of the human baseline across all dimensions at once. Each exhibits a distinct specialization profile with characteristic blind spots -- failure modes that aggregate metrics miss entirely. The implication is that LLM reviewers are best understood as targeted supplements to human review, effective within specific dimensions, but unreliable as standalone replacements. Our demo and key results can be found at https://khanhthanhdev.github.io/prism-page/.

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Paper submitter

PRISM is a benchmarking framework that evaluates LLM peer reviewers against human experts across four scientifically grounded dimensions—depth of analysis, novelty assessment, flaw identification, and constructiveness. Applied to five leading automated reviewer systems on 1,000 papers from ICLR, ICML, and NeurIPS, PRISM finds that LLMs can match or exceed humans on individual dimensions, but no single system sustains this across all four simultaneously—each excels in a distinct niche while exhibiting structured blind spots invisible to aggregate metrics.

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