This paper introduces two methods for creating Arabic LLM prompts at scale: translating existing English prompt datasets and creating natural language prompts from Arabic NLP datasets. Using these methods, the authors generated over 67.4 million Arabic prompts covering tasks like summarization and question answering. Fine-tuning a 7B Qwen2 model on these prompts outperforms a 70B Llama3 model in handling Arabic prompts. Why it matters: The research provides a cost-effective approach to scaling Arabic LLM training data, potentially improving the performance of smaller, more accessible models for Arabic NLP.
A new benchmark, LongShOTBench, is introduced for evaluating multimodal reasoning and tool use in long videos, featuring open-ended questions and diagnostic rubrics. The benchmark addresses the limitations of existing datasets by combining temporal length and multimodal richness, using human-validated samples. LongShOTAgent, an agentic system, is also presented for analyzing long videos, with both the benchmark and agent demonstrating the challenges faced by state-of-the-art MLLMs.
This article discusses retrieval augmentation in text generation, where information retrieved from an external source is used to condition predictions. It references recent work on retrieval-augmented image captioning, showing that model size can be greatly reduced when training data is available through retrieval. The author intends to continue this work focusing on the intersection of retrieval augmentation and in-context learning, and controllable image captioning for language learning materials. Why it matters: This research direction has the potential to improve transfer learning in vision-language models, which could be especially relevant for downstream applications in Arabic NLP and multimodal tasks.
This research evaluates LLMs like ChatGPT, Llama, Aya, Jais, and ACEGPT on Arabic automated essay scoring (AES) using the AR-AES dataset. The study uses zero-shot, few-shot learning, and fine-tuning approaches while using a mixed-language prompting strategy. ACEGPT performed best among the LLMs with a QWK of 0.67, while a smaller BERT model achieved 0.88. Why it matters: The study highlights challenges faced by LLMs in processing Arabic and provides insights into improving LLM performance in Arabic NLP tasks.