CHAL: Council of Hierarchical Agentic Language
Tommaso Giovannelli, Griffin D. Kent
Why It Matters
What makes this one worth your time
This research could enhance the transparency and alignment of AI reasoning systems, making them more interpretable and subject to human oversight.
CHAL proposes a novel framework for optimizing beliefs in multi-agent debates over defeasible domains.
Summary
The paper introduces CHAL, a multi-agent dialectic framework designed for defeasible argumentation, which optimizes belief representation and revision through a graph-structured belief schema and configurable meta-cognitive value systems.
Key contributions
- Introduction of the Council of Hierarchical Agentic Language (CHAL) framework for multi-agent debate.
- Development of the CHAL Belief Schema (CBS) for belief representation and revision.
- Presentation of ablation experiments demonstrating the impact of adjudicator value systems on belief trajectories.
Notable insights
- The use of a graph-structured belief representation allows for dynamic belief revision, which is a sophisticated approach to managing agent beliefs.
- Configurable hyperparameters for epistemology, logic, and ethics could lead to more tailored and effective reasoning outcomes.
Possible limitations
- Not stated in the abstract.
Abstract
arXiv:2605.12718v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: Multi-agent debate has emerged as a promising approach for improving LLM reasoning on ground-truth tasks, yet current methodologies face certain structural limitations: debate tends to induce a martingale over belief trajectories, majority voting accounts for most observed gains, and LLMs exhibit confidence escalation rather than calibration across rounds. We argue that the genuine value of debate, and dialectic systems as a whole, lies not in ground-truth tasks but in defeasible domains, where every position can in principle be defeated by better reasoning. We present the Council of Hierarchical Agentic Language (CHAL), a multi-agent dialectic framework that treats defeasible argumentation as an engine for belief optimization. Each agent maintains a CHAL Belief Schema (CBS), a graph-structured belief representation with a Bayesian-inspired architecture, that facilitates belief revision through a gradient-informed dynamic mechanism by leveraging the strength of the belief's thesis as a differentiable objective. Meta-cognitive value systems spanning epistemology, logic, and ethics are elevated to configurable hyperparameters governing agent reasoning and adjudication outcomes. We provide a series of ablation experiments that demonstrate systematic and interpretable effects: the adjudicator's value system determines the debate's overall trajectories in latent belief space, council diversity refines beliefs for all participants, and the framework generalizes across broad fields. CHAL is, to our knowledge, the first framework to treat multi-agent debate as structured belief optimization over defeasible domains. Further, the auditable belief artifacts it produces establish the foundation for dedicated evaluation suites for defeasible argumentation, with broader implications for building AI systems whose reasoning and value commitments are transparent, aligned, and subject to human oversight.