Prof. Daniel Panario gave a seminar on irreducible polynomials over finite fields and their applications in cryptography. The seminar covered how finite fields are used as basic components in many cryptographic applications. It surveyed families of irreducible polynomials and commented on their properties. Why it matters: The talk highlights the mathematical foundations and ongoing research relevant to cryptographic implementations in the region.
The paper introduces ArabicNumBench, a benchmark for evaluating LLMs on Arabic number reading using both Eastern and Western Arabic numerals. It evaluates 71 models from 10 providers on 210 number reading tasks, using zero-shot, zero-shot CoT, few-shot, and few-shot CoT prompting strategies. The results show substantial performance variation, with few-shot CoT prompting achieving 2.8x higher accuracy than zero-shot approaches. Why it matters: The benchmark establishes baselines for Arabic number comprehension and provides guidance for model selection in production Arabic NLP systems.
MBZUAI researchers introduce VideoMathQA, a new benchmark for evaluating mathematical reasoning in videos, requiring models to interpret visual information, text, and spoken cues. The dataset spans 10 mathematical domains with videos ranging from 10 seconds to over 1 hour, and includes multi-step reasoning annotations. The benchmark aims to evaluate temporal cross-modal reasoning and highlights the limitations of existing approaches in complex video-based mathematical problem solving.
Researchers introduce two new benchmarks, derived from the Qiyas exam, to evaluate mathematical reasoning and language understanding in Arabic. They tested ChatGPT-3.5-turbo and ChatGPT-4, which achieved 49% and 64% accuracy respectively. The new benchmarks aim to address the lack of resources for evaluating Arabic language models.
KAUST has launched the KAUST Mathematics Competition (KMC), a national mathematics initiative for middle and high school students in Saudi Arabia. The competition aims to identify and nurture young mathematical talent, aligning with Saudi Vision 2030. Winners will receive prizes and the opportunity to attend a joint summer mathematics camp at KAUST and the University of Cambridge in 2026, with registration open until Nov 9, 2025. Why it matters: This competition can help develop a pipeline of Saudi talent in STEM fields crucial for advancing the Kingdom's AI ambitions.
A study investigated language shift from Tibetan to Arabic among Tibetan families who migrated to Saudi Arabia 70 years ago. Data from 96 participants across three age groups revealed significant intergenerational differences in language use. Younger members rarely used Tibetan, while older members used it slightly more, with a p-value of .001 indicating statistical significance.
This paper presents the synthesis of a 1-DoF six-bar gripper mechanism for aerial grasping, designed for a task in the Mohamed Bin Zayed International Robotics Challenge (MBZIRC) 2020. The synthesis process involves selecting the mechanism class, determining the number of links and joints using algebraic methods, and optimizing link dimensions via geometric programming. The gripper was modeled in CAD software, additively manufactured, and mounted on a UAV with a DC motor for gripping spherical objects. Why it matters: The research contributes to advancements in robotics and aerial manipulation, with potential applications in various industries, particularly for tasks requiring remote object retrieval and manipulation.