llm-evaluation
Master comprehensive evaluation strategies for LLM applications, from automated metrics to human evaluation and A/B testing.
Best use case
llm-evaluation is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt.
Master comprehensive evaluation strategies for LLM applications, from automated metrics to human evaluation and A/B testing.
Teams using llm-evaluation should expect a more consistent output, faster repeated execution, less prompt rewriting.
When to use this skill
- You want a reusable workflow that can be run more than once with consistent structure.
When not to use this skill
- You only need a quick one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
- You cannot install or maintain the underlying files, dependencies, or repository context.
Installation
Claude Code / Cursor / Codex
Manual Installation
- Download SKILL.md from GitHub
- Place it in
.claude/skills/llm-evaluation/SKILL.mdinside your project - Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill
How llm-evaluation Compares
| Feature / Agent | llm-evaluation | Standard Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Platform Support | Not specified | Limited / Varies |
| Context Awareness | High | Baseline |
| Installation Complexity | Unknown | N/A |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does this skill do?
Master comprehensive evaluation strategies for LLM applications, from automated metrics to human evaluation and A/B testing.
Where can I find the source code?
You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.
SKILL.md Source
# LLM Evaluation
Master comprehensive evaluation strategies for LLM applications, from automated metrics to human evaluation and A/B testing.
## Do not use this skill when
- The task is unrelated to llm evaluation
- You need a different domain or tool outside this scope
## Instructions
- Clarify goals, constraints, and required inputs.
- Apply relevant best practices and validate outcomes.
- Provide actionable steps and verification.
- If detailed examples are required, open `resources/implementation-playbook.md`.
## Use this skill when
- Measuring LLM application performance systematically
- Comparing different models or prompts
- Detecting performance regressions before deployment
- Validating improvements from prompt changes
- Building confidence in production systems
- Establishing baselines and tracking progress over time
- Debugging unexpected model behavior
## Core Evaluation Types
### 1. Automated Metrics
Fast, repeatable, scalable evaluation using computed scores.
**Text Generation:**
- **BLEU**: N-gram overlap (translation)
- **ROUGE**: Recall-oriented (summarization)
- **METEOR**: Semantic similarity
- **BERTScore**: Embedding-based similarity
- **Perplexity**: Language model confidence
**Classification:**
- **Accuracy**: Percentage correct
- **Precision/Recall/F1**: Class-specific performance
- **Confusion Matrix**: Error patterns
- **AUC-ROC**: Ranking quality
**Retrieval (RAG):**
- **MRR**: Mean Reciprocal Rank
- **NDCG**: Normalized Discounted Cumulative Gain
- **Precision@K**: Relevant in top K
- **Recall@K**: Coverage in top K
### 2. Human Evaluation
Manual assessment for quality aspects difficult to automate.
**Dimensions:**
- **Accuracy**: Factual correctness
- **Coherence**: Logical flow
- **Relevance**: Answers the question
- **Fluency**: Natural language quality
- **Safety**: No harmful content
- **Helpfulness**: Useful to the user
### 3. LLM-as-Judge
Use stronger LLMs to evaluate weaker model outputs.
**Approaches:**
- **Pointwise**: Score individual responses
- **Pairwise**: Compare two responses
- **Reference-based**: Compare to gold standard
- **Reference-free**: Judge without ground truth
## Quick Start
```python
from llm_eval import EvaluationSuite, Metric
# Define evaluation suite
suite = EvaluationSuite([
Metric.accuracy(),
Metric.bleu(),
Metric.bertscore(),
Metric.custom(name="groundedness", fn=check_groundedness)
])
# Prepare test cases
test_cases = [
{
"input": "What is the capital of France?",
"expected": "Paris",
"context": "France is a country in Europe. Paris is its capital."
},
# ... more test cases
]
# Run evaluation
results = suite.evaluate(
model=your_model,
test_cases=test_cases
)
print(f"Overall Accuracy: {results.metrics['accuracy']}")
print(f"BLEU Score: {results.metrics['bleu']}")
```
## Automated Metrics Implementation
### BLEU Score
```python
from nltk.translate.bleu_score import sentence_bleu, SmoothingFunction
def calculate_bleu(reference, hypothesis):
"""Calculate BLEU score between reference and hypothesis."""
smoothie = SmoothingFunction().method4
return sentence_bleu(
[reference.split()],
hypothesis.split(),
smoothing_function=smoothie
)
# Usage
bleu = calculate_bleu(
reference="The cat sat on the mat",
hypothesis="A cat is sitting on the mat"
)
```
### ROUGE Score
```python
from rouge_score import rouge_scorer
def calculate_rouge(reference, hypothesis):
"""Calculate ROUGE scores."""
scorer = rouge_scorer.RougeScorer(['rouge1', 'rouge2', 'rougeL'], use_stemmer=True)
scores = scorer.score(reference, hypothesis)
return {
'rouge1': scores['rouge1'].fmeasure,
'rouge2': scores['rouge2'].fmeasure,
'rougeL': scores['rougeL'].fmeasure
}
```
### BERTScore
```python
from bert_score import score
def calculate_bertscore(references, hypotheses):
"""Calculate BERTScore using pre-trained BERT."""
P, R, F1 = score(
hypotheses,
references,
lang='en',
model_type='microsoft/deberta-xlarge-mnli'
)
return {
'precision': P.mean().item(),
'recall': R.mean().item(),
'f1': F1.mean().item()
}
```
### Custom Metrics
```python
def calculate_groundedness(response, context):
"""Check if response is grounded in provided context."""
# Use NLI model to check entailment
from transformers import pipeline
nli = pipeline("text-classification", model="microsoft/deberta-large-mnli")
result = nli(f"{context} [SEP] {response}")[0]
# Return confidence that response is entailed by context
return result['score'] if result['label'] == 'ENTAILMENT' else 0.0
def calculate_toxicity(text):
"""Measure toxicity in generated text."""
from detoxify import Detoxify
results = Detoxify('original').predict(text)
return max(results.values()) # Return highest toxicity score
def calculate_factuality(claim, knowledge_base):
"""Verify factual claims against knowledge base."""
# Implementation depends on your knowledge base
# Could use retrieval + NLI, or fact-checking API
pass
```
## LLM-as-Judge Patterns
### Single Output Evaluation
```python
def llm_judge_quality(response, question):
"""Use GPT-5 to judge response quality."""
prompt = f"""Rate the following response on a scale of 1-10 for:
1. Accuracy (factually correct)
2. Helpfulness (answers the question)
3. Clarity (well-written and understandable)
Question: {question}
Response: {response}
Provide ratings in JSON format:
{{
"accuracy": <1-10>,
"helpfulness": <1-10>,
"clarity": <1-10>,
"reasoning": "<brief explanation>"
}}
"""
result = openai.ChatCompletion.create(
model="gpt-5",
messages=[{"role": "user", "content": prompt}],
temperature=0
)
return json.loads(result.choices[0].message.content)
```
### Pairwise Comparison
```python
def compare_responses(question, response_a, response_b):
"""Compare two responses using LLM judge."""
prompt = f"""Compare these two responses to the question and determine which is better.
Question: {question}
Response A: {response_a}
Response B: {response_b}
Which response is better and why? Consider accuracy, helpfulness, and clarity.
Answer with JSON:
{{
"winner": "A" or "B" or "tie",
"reasoning": "<explanation>",
"confidence": <1-10>
}}
"""
result = openai.ChatCompletion.create(
model="gpt-5",
messages=[{"role": "user", "content": prompt}],
temperature=0
)
return json.loads(result.choices[0].message.content)
```
## Human Evaluation Frameworks
### Annotation Guidelines
```python
class AnnotationTask:
"""Structure for human annotation task."""
def __init__(self, response, question, context=None):
self.response = response
self.question = question
self.context = context
def get_annotation_form(self):
return {
"question": self.question,
"context": self.context,
"response": self.response,
"ratings": {
"accuracy": {
"scale": "1-5",
"description": "Is the response factually correct?"
},
"relevance": {
"scale": "1-5",
"description": "Does it answer the question?"
},
"coherence": {
"scale": "1-5",
"description": "Is it logically consistent?"
}
},
"issues": {
"factual_error": False,
"hallucination": False,
"off_topic": False,
"unsafe_content": False
},
"feedback": ""
}
```
### Inter-Rater Agreement
```python
from sklearn.metrics import cohen_kappa_score
def calculate_agreement(rater1_scores, rater2_scores):
"""Calculate inter-rater agreement."""
kappa = cohen_kappa_score(rater1_scores, rater2_scores)
interpretation = {
kappa < 0: "Poor",
kappa < 0.2: "Slight",
kappa < 0.4: "Fair",
kappa < 0.6: "Moderate",
kappa < 0.8: "Substantial",
kappa <= 1.0: "Almost Perfect"
}
return {
"kappa": kappa,
"interpretation": interpretation[True]
}
```
## A/B Testing
### Statistical Testing Framework
```python
from scipy import stats
import numpy as np
class ABTest:
def __init__(self, variant_a_name="A", variant_b_name="B"):
self.variant_a = {"name": variant_a_name, "scores": []}
self.variant_b = {"name": variant_b_name, "scores": []}
def add_result(self, variant, score):
"""Add evaluation result for a variant."""
if variant == "A":
self.variant_a["scores"].append(score)
else:
self.variant_b["scores"].append(score)
def analyze(self, alpha=0.05):
"""Perform statistical analysis."""
a_scores = self.variant_a["scores"]
b_scores = self.variant_b["scores"]
# T-test
t_stat, p_value = stats.ttest_ind(a_scores, b_scores)
# Effect size (Cohen's d)
pooled_std = np.sqrt((np.std(a_scores)**2 + np.std(b_scores)**2) / 2)
cohens_d = (np.mean(b_scores) - np.mean(a_scores)) / pooled_std
return {
"variant_a_mean": np.mean(a_scores),
"variant_b_mean": np.mean(b_scores),
"difference": np.mean(b_scores) - np.mean(a_scores),
"relative_improvement": (np.mean(b_scores) - np.mean(a_scores)) / np.mean(a_scores),
"p_value": p_value,
"statistically_significant": p_value < alpha,
"cohens_d": cohens_d,
"effect_size": self.interpret_cohens_d(cohens_d),
"winner": "B" if np.mean(b_scores) > np.mean(a_scores) else "A"
}
@staticmethod
def interpret_cohens_d(d):
"""Interpret Cohen's d effect size."""
abs_d = abs(d)
if abs_d < 0.2:
return "negligible"
elif abs_d < 0.5:
return "small"
elif abs_d < 0.8:
return "medium"
else:
return "large"
```
## Regression Testing
### Regression Detection
```python
class RegressionDetector:
def __init__(self, baseline_results, threshold=0.05):
self.baseline = baseline_results
self.threshold = threshold
def check_for_regression(self, new_results):
"""Detect if new results show regression."""
regressions = []
for metric in self.baseline.keys():
baseline_score = self.baseline[metric]
new_score = new_results.get(metric)
if new_score is None:
continue
# Calculate relative change
relative_change = (new_score - baseline_score) / baseline_score
# Flag if significant decrease
if relative_change < -self.threshold:
regressions.append({
"metric": metric,
"baseline": baseline_score,
"current": new_score,
"change": relative_change
})
return {
"has_regression": len(regressions) > 0,
"regressions": regressions
}
```
## Benchmarking
### Running Benchmarks
```python
class BenchmarkRunner:
def __init__(self, benchmark_dataset):
self.dataset = benchmark_dataset
def run_benchmark(self, model, metrics):
"""Run model on benchmark and calculate metrics."""
results = {metric.name: [] for metric in metrics}
for example in self.dataset:
# Generate prediction
prediction = model.predict(example["input"])
# Calculate each metric
for metric in metrics:
score = metric.calculate(
prediction=prediction,
reference=example["reference"],
context=example.get("context")
)
results[metric.name].append(score)
# Aggregate results
return {
metric: {
"mean": np.mean(scores),
"std": np.std(scores),
"min": min(scores),
"max": max(scores)
}
for metric, scores in results.items()
}
```
## Resources
- **references/metrics.md**: Comprehensive metric guide
- **references/human-evaluation.md**: Annotation best practices
- **references/benchmarking.md**: Standard benchmarks
- **references/a-b-testing.md**: Statistical testing guide
- **references/regression-testing.md**: CI/CD integration
- **assets/evaluation-framework.py**: Complete evaluation harness
- **assets/benchmark-dataset.jsonl**: Example datasets
- **scripts/evaluate-model.py**: Automated evaluation runner
## Best Practices
1. **Multiple Metrics**: Use diverse metrics for comprehensive view
2. **Representative Data**: Test on real-world, diverse examples
3. **Baselines**: Always compare against baseline performance
4. **Statistical Rigor**: Use proper statistical tests for comparisons
5. **Continuous Evaluation**: Integrate into CI/CD pipeline
6. **Human Validation**: Combine automated metrics with human judgment
7. **Error Analysis**: Investigate failures to understand weaknesses
8. **Version Control**: Track evaluation results over time
## Common Pitfalls
- **Single Metric Obsession**: Optimizing for one metric at the expense of others
- **Small Sample Size**: Drawing conclusions from too few examples
- **Data Contamination**: Testing on training data
- **Ignoring Variance**: Not accounting for statistical uncertainty
- **Metric Mismatch**: Using metrics not aligned with business goals
## Limitations
- Use this skill only when the task clearly matches the scope described above.
- Do not treat the output as a substitute for environment-specific validation, testing, or expert review.
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