AI Hallucination

AI Hallucination

Term explanation

Definition and meaning

AI hallucination describes the phenomenon where an LLM confidently produces content that is factually incorrect, fabricated, or entirely made up — presented as though it were true. Hallucinations occur because language models generate statistically probable text based on training patterns, without access to verified facts. In enterprise contexts, hallucinations in presentations are a serious risk. AI grounding — anchoring outputs to verified company data — is the primary strategy for preventing hallucinations in production AI systems.

LIZ AI is built to eliminate hallucinations in presentations. By grounding every slide in verified data from your connected enterprise systems, LIZ ensures that what appears in your deck is always accurate and traceable.

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Other glossary terms

Multimedia Presentation

A multimedia presentation combines multiple types of content — such as text, images, audio, video, animations, and interactive elements — into a single cohesive slide deck or digital experience. By engaging more senses, multimedia presentations improve audience attention and retention compared to text-heavy slides. They are used in marketing, training, education, and corporate communications. Modern presentation tools make it straightforward to integrate diverse media types, though content balance and loading performance remain important considerations.

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Vocal distractions

Vocal distractions are habits or patterns in a speaker's voice that draw attention away from the content of a message. These include filler words like 'um' and 'uh', monotone delivery, excessive speed or slowness, a rising intonation at the end of statements (upspeak), and throat-clearing. Vocal distractions reduce the impact and perceived professionalism of a presentation. They can typically be addressed through targeted public speaking practice, recording and self-review, and professional coaching.

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Recall Questions

Recall questions ask participants to retrieve and state information they have previously learned or been told. They test memory and knowledge retention rather than understanding or analysis. In training sessions and educational presentations, recall questions at the end of a segment can reinforce key points and check how much the audience has absorbed. While they don't assess deeper comprehension, they are an efficient tool for checking baseline knowledge and reinforcing core facts.

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Multimedia Presentation

A multimedia presentation combines multiple types of content — such as text, images, audio, video, animations, and interactive elements — into a single cohesive slide deck or digital experience. By engaging more senses, multimedia presentations improve audience attention and retention compared to text-heavy slides. They are used in marketing, training, education, and corporate communications. Modern presentation tools make it straightforward to integrate diverse media types, though content balance and loading performance remain important considerations.

Learn more

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