The Eval Rubric Pulled By Two Drift Vectors
Your composite eval score went up two points last quarter. Nobody can tell you whether the system got better, whether the human cohort that scores it got more lenient, or whether the judge model you upgraded in March started weighting verbosity differently. The number moved. The thing the number is supposed to measure did not necessarily move with it.
This is what happens when an eval rubric is read by two populations at once — humans and an LLM judge — and both populations drift on different axes for different reasons. The composite score blends their motion together, and unless you have a measurement protocol that holds one fixed while the other moves, you have shipped a metric whose changes are not attributable to anything.
