Laghouat
Global PIQA: Evaluating Physical Commonsense Reasoning Across 100+ Languages and Cultures
Chang, Tyler A., Arnett, Catherine, Eldesokey, Abdelrahman, Sadallah, Abdelrahman, Kashar, Abeer, Daud, Abolade, Olanihun, Abosede Grace, Mohammed, Adamu Labaran, Praise, Adeyemi, Sharma, Adhikarinayum Meerajita, Gupta, Aditi, Iyigun, Afitab, Simplício, Afonso, Essouaied, Ahmed, Chorana, Aicha, Eppa, Akhil, Oladipo, Akintunde, Ramesh, Akshay, Dorkin, Aleksei, Kondoro, Alfred Malengo, Aji, Alham Fikri, Çetintaş, Ali Eren, Hanbury, Allan, Dembele, Alou, Niksarli, Alp, Arroyo, Álvaro, Bajand, Amin, Khanna, Amol, Chkhaidze, Ana, Condez, Ana, Mkhonto, Andiswa, Hoblitzell, Andrew, Tran, Andrew, Poulis, Angelos, Majumder, Anirban, Vacalopoulou, Anna, Wong, Annette Kuuipolani Kanahele, Simonsen, Annika, Kovalev, Anton, S, Ashvanth., Lana, Ayodeji Joseph, Kinay, Barkin, Alhafni, Bashar, Busole, Benedict Cibalinda, Ghanem, Bernard, Nathani, Bharti, Đurić, Biljana Stojanovska, Agbonile, Bola, Bergsson, Bragi, Fischer, Bruce Torres, Tutar, Burak, Çınar, Burcu Alakuş, Kane, Cade J. Kanoniakapueo, Udomcharoenchaikit, Can, Arnett, Catherine, Helwe, Chadi, Nerella, Chaithra Reddy, Liu, Chen Cecilia, Nwokolo, Chiamaka Glory, España-Bonet, Cristina, Amol, Cynthia, Lee, DaeYeop, Arad, Dana, Dzenhaliou, Daniil, Pugacheva, Daria, Choi, Dasol, Abolade, Daud, Liu, David, Semedo, David, Popoola, Deborah, Mataciunas, Deividas, Nyaboke, Delphine, Kumar, Dhyuthy Krishna, Glória-Silva, Diogo, Tavares, Diogo, Goyal, Divyanshu, Lee, DongGeon, Anajemba, Ebele Nwamaka, Grace, Egonu Ngozi, Mickel, Elena, Tutubalina, Elena, Herranen, Elias, Anand, Emile, Habumuremyi, Emmanuel, Ajiboye, Emuobonuvie Maria, Yulianrifat, Eryawan Presma, Adenuga, Esther, Rudnicka, Ewa, Itiola, Faith Olabisi, Butt, Faran Taimoor, Thekkekara, Fathima, Haouari, Fatima, Tjiaranata, Filbert Aurelian, Laakom, Firas, Grasso, Francesca, Orabona, Francesco, Periti, Francesco, Solomon, Gbenga Kayode, Ngo, Gia Nghia, Udhehdhe-oze, Gloria, Martins, Gonçalo, Challagolla, Gopi Naga Sai Ram, Son, Guijin, Abdykadyrova, Gulnaz, Einarsson, Hafsteinn, Hu, Hai, Saffari, Hamidreza, Zaidi, Hamza, Zhang, Haopeng, Shairah, Harethah Abu, Vuong, Harry, Kuulmets, Hele-Andra, Bouamor, Houda, Yu, Hwanjo, Debess, Iben Nyholm, Deveci, İbrahim Ethem, Hanif, Ikhlasul Akmal, Cho, Ikhyun, Calvo, Inês, Vieira, Inês, Manzi, Isaac, Daud, Ismail, Itzhak, Itay, Iuliia, null, Alekseenko, null, Belashkin, Ivan, Spada, Ivan, Zhelyazkov, Ivan, Brinton, Jacob, Isbarov, Jafar, Čibej, Jaka, Čuhel, Jan, Kocoń, Jan, Krito, Jauza Akbar, Purbey, Jebish, Mickel, Jennifer, Za, Jennifer, Kunz, Jenny, Jeong, Jihae, Dávalos, Jimena Tena, Lee, Jinu, Magalhães, João, Yi, John, Kim, Jongin, Chataignon, Joseph, Imperial, Joseph Marvin, Thevakumar, Jubeerathan, Land, Judith, Jiang, Junchen, Kim, Jungwhan, Sirts, Kairit, R, Kamesh, V, Kamesh, Tshinu, Kanda Patrick, Kukk, Kätriin, Ponkshe, Kaustubh, Huseynova, Kavsar, He, Ke, Buchanan, Kelly, Sarveswaran, Kengatharaiyer, Zaman, Kerem, Mrini, Khalil, Kyars, Kian, Kruusmaa, Krister, Chouhan, Kusum, Krishnakumar, Lainitha, Sánchez, Laura Castro, Moscoso, Laura Porrino, Choshen, Leshem, Sencan, Levent, Øvrelid, Lilja, Alazraki, Lisa, Ehimen-Ugbede, Lovina, Thevakumar, Luheerathan, Thavarasa, Luxshan, Malik, Mahnoor, Keita, Mamadou K., Jangid, Mansi, De Santis, Marco, García, Marcos, Suppa, Marek, D'Ciofalo, Mariam, Ojastu, Marii, Sikander, Maryam, Narayan, Mausami, Skandalis, Maximos, Mehak, Mehak, Bozkurt, Mehmet İlteriş, Workie, Melaku Bayu, Velayuthan, Menan, Leventhal, Michael, Marcińczuk, Michał, Potočnjak, Mirna, Shafiei, Mohammadamin, Sharma, Mridul, Indoria, Mrityunjaya, Habibi, Muhammad Ravi Shulthan, Kolić, Murat, Galant, Nada, Permpredanun, Naphat, Maugin, Narada, Corrêa, Nicholas Kluge, Ljubešić, Nikola, Thomas, Nirmal, de Silva, Nisansa, Joshi, Nisheeth, Ponkshe, Nitish, Habash, Nizar, Udeze, Nneoma C., Thomas, Noel, Ligeti-Nagy, Noémi, Coulibaly, Nouhoum, Faustin, Nsengiyumva, Buliaminu, Odunayo Kareemat, Ogundepo, Odunayo, Fejiro, Oghojafor Godswill, Funmilola, Ogundipe Blessing, God'spraise, Okechukwu, Samuel, Olanrewaju, Oluwaseun, Olaoye Deborah, Akindejoye, Olasoji, Popova, Olga, Snissarenko, Olga, Chiemezie, Onyinye Anulika, Kinay, Orkun, Tursun, Osman, Moses, Owoeye Tobiloba, Joshua, Oyelade Oluwafemi, Fiyinfoluwa, Oyesanmi, Gamallo, Pablo, Fernández, Pablo Rodríguez, Arora, Palak, Valente, Pedro, Rupnik, Peter, Ekiugbo, Philip Oghenesuowho, Sahoo, Pramit, Prokopidis, Prokopis, Niau-Puhipau, Pua, Yahya, Quadri, Mignone, Rachele, Singhal, Raghav, Kadiyala, Ram Mohan Rao, Merx, Raphael, Afolayan, Rapheal, Rajalakshmi, Ratnavel, Ghosh, Rishav, Oji, Romina, Solis, Ron Kekeha, Guerra, Rui, Zawar, Rushikesh, Bashir, Sa'ad Nasir, Alzaabi, Saeed, Sandeep, Sahil, Batchu, Sai Pavan, Kantareddy, SaiSandeep, Pranida, Salsabila Zahirah, Buchanan, Sam, Rutunda, Samuel, Land, Sander, Sulollari, Sarah, Ali, Sardar, Sapkota, Saroj, Tautvaisas, Saulius, Sen, Sayambhu, Banerjee, Sayantani, Diarra, Sebastien, M, SenthilNathan., Lee, Sewoong, Shah, Shaan, Venkitachalam, Shankar, Djurabaeva, Sharifa, Ibejih, Sharon, Dutta, Shivanya Shomir, Gupta, Siddhant, Suárez, Silvia Paniagua, Ahmadi, Sina, Sukumar, Sivasuthan, Song, Siyuan, A., Snegha, Sofianopoulos, Sokratis, Simon, Sona Elza, Benčina, Sonja, Gvasalia, Sophie, More, Sphurti Kirit, Dragazis, Spyros, Kaufhold, Stephan P., S, Suba., AlRashed, Sultan, Ranathunga, Surangika, Someya, Taiga, Pungeršek, Taja Kuzman, Haklay, Tal, Jibril, Tasi'u, Aoyama, Tatsuya, Abashidze, Tea, Cruz, Terenz Jomar Dela, Blevins, Terra, Nikas, Themistoklis, Idoko, Theresa Dora, Do, Thu Mai, Chubakov, Tilek, Gargiani, Tommaso, Rathore, Uma, Johannesen, Uni, Ugwu, Uwuma Doris, Putra, Vallerie Alexandra, Kumar, Vanya Bannihatti, Jeyarajalingam, Varsha, Arzt, Varvara, Nedumpozhimana, Vasudevan, Ondrejova, Viktoria, Horbik, Viktoryia, Kummitha, Vishnu Vardhan Reddy, Dinić, Vuk, Sewunetie, Walelign Tewabe, Wu, Winston, Zhao, Xiaojing, Diarra, Yacouba, Nikankin, Yaniv, Mathur, Yash, Chen, Yixi, Li, Yiyuan, Xavier, Yolanda, Belinkov, Yonatan, Abayomi, Yusuf Ismail, Alyafeai, Zaid, Shan, Zhengyang, Tam, Zhi Rui, Tang, Zilu, Nadova, Zuzana, Abbasi, Baber, Biderman, Stella, Stap, David, Ataman, Duygu, Schmidt, Fabian, Gonen, Hila, Wang, Jiayi, Adelani, David Ifeoluwa
To date, there exist almost no culturally-specific evaluation benchmarks for large language models (LLMs) that cover a large number of languages and cultures. In this paper, we present Global PIQA, a participatory commonsense reasoning benchmark for over 100 languages, constructed by hand by 335 researchers from 65 countries around the world. The 116 language varieties in Global PIQA cover five continents, 14 language families, and 23 writing systems. In the non-parallel split of Global PIQA, over 50% of examples reference local foods, customs, traditions, or other culturally-specific elements. We find that state-of-the-art LLMs perform well on Global PIQA in aggregate, but they exhibit weaker performance in lower-resource languages (up to a 37% accuracy gap, despite random chance at 50%). Open models generally perform worse than proprietary models. Global PIQA highlights that in many languages and cultures, everyday knowledge remains an area for improvement, alongside more widely-discussed capabilities such as complex reasoning and expert knowledge. Beyond its uses for LLM evaluation, we hope that Global PIQA provides a glimpse into the wide diversity of cultures in which human language is embedded.
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A Relay-Chain-Powered Ciphertext-Policy Attribute-Based Encryption in Intelligent Transportation Systems
Singh, Aparna, Rathee, Geetanjali, Kerrache, Chaker Abdelaziz, Ghanem, Mohamed Chahine
The very high growth of Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) has generated an urgent requirement for secure, effective, and context-aware data sharing mechanisms, especially over heterogeneous and geographically dispersed settings. This work suggests a new architecture that combines a relay chain-driven encryption system with a modified Ciphertext-Policy Attribute-Based Encryption (CP-ABE) scheme to tackle the double impediment of dynamic access and low-latency communication. The model proposes a context-aware smart contract on a worldwide relay chain that checks against data properties, including event type, time, and geographical region, to specify the suitable level of encryption policy. From such relay-directed judgment, On-Board Units (OBUs) encrypt data end-to-end by utilising CP-ABE and store ciphertext inside localised regional blockchains, preventing dependence on symmetric encryption or off-chain storage. High-sensitivity events are secured with firm, multi-attribute access rules, whereas common updates use light policies to help reduce processing burdens. The crypto system also adds traceability and low-latency revocation, with global enforcement managed through the relay chain. This distributed, scalable model provides a proper balance between responsiveness in real time and security and is extremely apt for next-gen vehicular networks that function across multi-jurisdictional domains.
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Information Ecosystem Reengineering via Public Sector Knowledge Representation
Information Ecosystem Reengineering (IER) -- the technological reconditioning of information sources, services, and systems within a complex information ecosystem -- is a foundational challenge in the digital transformation of public sector services and smart governance platforms. From a semantic knowledge management perspective, IER becomes especially entangled due to the potentially infinite number of possibilities in its conceptualization, namely, as a result of manifoldness in the multi-level mix of perception, language and conceptual interlinkage implicit in all agents involved in such an effort. This paper proposes a novel approach -- Representation Disentanglement -- to disentangle these multiple layers of knowledge representation complexity hindering effective reengineering decision making. The approach is based on the theoretically grounded and implementationally robust ontology-driven conceptual modeling paradigm which has been widely adopted in systems analysis and (re)engineering. We argue that such a framework is essential to achieve explainability, traceability and semantic transparency in public sector knowledge representation and to support auditable decision workflows in governance ecosystems increasingly driven by Artificial Intelligence (AI) and data-centric architectures.
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Arabic Multimodal Machine Learning: Datasets, Applications, Approaches, and Challenges
Haouhat, Abdelhamid, Bellaouar, Slimane, Nehar, Attia, Cherroun, Hadda, Abdelali, Ahmed
Multimodal Machine Learning (MML) aims to integrate and analyze information from diverse modalities, such as text, audio, and visuals, enabling machines to address complex tasks like sentiment analysis, emotion recognition, and multimedia retrieval. Recently, Arabic MML has reached a certain level of maturity in its foundational development, making it time to conduct a comprehensive survey. This paper explores Arabic MML by categorizing efforts through a novel taxonomy and analyzing existing research. Our taxonomy organizes these efforts into four key topics: datasets, applications, approaches, and challenges. By providing a structured overview, this survey offers insights into the current state of Arabic MML, highlighting areas that have not been investigated and critical research gaps. Researchers will be empowered to build upon the identified opportunities and address challenges to advance the field.
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VQA support to Arabic Language Learning Educational Tool
Delassi, Khaled Bachir, Zeggane, Lakhdar, Cherroun, Hadda, Haouhat, Abdelhamid, Bouzouad, Kaoutar
--W e address the problem of scarcity of educational Arabic Language Learning tools that advocates modern pedagogical models such active learning which ensures language proficiency . In fact, we investigate the design and evaluation of an AI-powered educational tool designed to enhance Arabic language learning for non-native speakers with beginner-to-intermediate proficiency level. The tool leverages advanced AI models to generate interactive visual quizzes, deploying Visual Question Answering as the primary activity . Adopting a constructivist learning approach, the system encourages active learning through real-life visual quizzes, and image-based questions that focus on improving vocabulary, grammar, and comprehension. The system integrates Vision-Language Pretraining models to generate contextually relevant image description from which Large Language Model generate assignments based on customized Arabic language Learning quizzes thanks to prompting. The effectiveness of the tool is evaluated through a manual annotated benchmark consisting of 1266 real-life visual quizzes, with human participants providing feedback. The results show a suitable accuracy rates, validating the tool's potential to bridge the gap in Arabic language education and highlighting the tool's promise as a reliable, AI-powered resource for Arabic learners, offering personalized and interactive learning experiences. I. Introduction Language learning has never been more important than it is today. Since the onset of globalization, language learning has become essential in facilitating communication across cultures and opening up numerous educational and professional opportunities [6]. To excel in any language, it is crucial to develop proficiency in all four core skills: listening, writing, reading, and speaking.
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AGI Enabled Solutions For IoX Layers Bottlenecks In Cyber-Physical-Social-Thinking Space
Khelloufi, Amar, Ning, Huansheng, Dhelim, Sahraoui, Ding, Jianguo
The integration of the Internet of Everything (IoX) and Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) has given rise to a transformative paradigm aimed at addressing critical bottlenecks across sensing, network, and application layers in Cyber-Physical-Social Thinking (CPST) ecosystems. In this survey, we provide a systematic and comprehensive review of AGI-enhanced IoX research, focusing on three key components: sensing-layer data management, network-layer protocol optimization, and application-layer decision-making frameworks. Specifically, this survey explores how AGI can mitigate IoX bottlenecks challenges by leveraging adaptive sensor fusion, edge preprocessing, and selective attention mechanisms at the sensing layer, while resolving network-layer issues such as protocol heterogeneity and dynamic spectrum management, neuro-symbolic reasoning, active inference, and causal reasoning, Furthermore, the survey examines AGI-enabled frameworks for managing identity and relationship explosion. Key findings suggest that AGI-driven strategies, such as adaptive sensor fusion, edge preprocessing, and semantic modeling, offer novel solutions to sensing-layer data overload, network-layer protocol heterogeneity, and application-layer identity explosion. The survey underscores the importance of cross-layer integration, quantum-enabled communication, and ethical governance frameworks for future AGI-enabled IoX systems. Finally, the survey identifies unresolved challenges, such as computational requirements, scalability, and real-world validation, calling for further research to fully realize AGI's potential in addressing IoX bottlenecks. we believe AGI-enhanced IoX is emerging as a critical research field at the intersection of interconnected systems and advanced AI.
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Adapting Mental Health Prediction Tasks for Cross-lingual Learning via Meta-Training and In-context Learning with Large Language Model
Lifelo, Zita, Ning, Huansheng, Dhelim, Sahraoui
Timely identification is essential for the efficient handling of mental health illnesses such as depression. However, the current research fails to adequately address the prediction of mental health conditions from social media data in low-resource African languages like Swahili. This study introduces two distinct approaches utilising model-agnostic meta-learning and leveraging large language models (LLMs) to address this gap. Experiments are conducted on three datasets translated to low-resource language and applied to four mental health tasks, which include stress, depression, depression severity and suicidal ideation prediction. we first apply a meta-learning model with self-supervision, which results in improved model initialisation for rapid adaptation and cross-lingual transfer. The results show that our meta-trained model performs significantly better than standard fine-tuning methods, outperforming the baseline fine-tuning in macro F1 score with 18\% and 0.8\% over XLM-R and mBERT. In parallel, we use LLMs' in-context learning capabilities to assess their performance accuracy across the Swahili mental health prediction tasks by analysing different cross-lingual prompting approaches. Our analysis showed that Swahili prompts performed better than cross-lingual prompts but less than English prompts. Our findings show that in-context learning can be achieved through cross-lingual transfer through carefully crafted prompt templates with examples and instructions.
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Selective Task offloading for Maximum Inference Accuracy and Energy efficient Real-Time IoT Sensing Systems
Sada, Abdelkarim Ben, Khelloufi, Amar, Naouri, Abdenacer, Ning, Huansheng, Dhelim, Sahraoui
The recent advancements in small-size inference models facilitated AI deployment on the edge. However, the limited resource nature of edge devices poses new challenges especially for real-time applications. Deploying multiple inference models (or a single tunable model) varying in size and therefore accuracy and power consumption, in addition to an edge server inference model, can offer a dynamic system in which the allocation of inference models to inference jobs is performed according to the current resource conditions. Therefore, in this work, we tackle the problem of selectively allocating inference models to jobs or offloading them to the edge server to maximize inference accuracy under time and energy constraints. This problem is shown to be an instance of the unbounded multidimensional knapsack problem which is considered a strongly NP-hard problem. We propose a lightweight hybrid genetic algorithm (LGSTO) to solve this problem. We introduce a termination condition and neighborhood exploration techniques for faster evolution of populations. We compare LGSTO with the Naive and Dynamic programming solutions. In addition to classic genetic algorithms using different reproduction methods including NSGA-II, and finally we compare to other evolutionary methods such as Particle swarm optimization (PSO) and Ant colony optimization (ACO). Experiment results show that LGSTO performed 3 times faster than the fastest comparable schemes while producing schedules with higher average accuracy.
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Towards Reliable Participation in UAV-Enabled Federated Edge Learning on Non-IID Data
Cheriguene, Youssra, Jaafar, Wael, Yanikomeroglu, Halim, Kerrache, Chaker Abdelaziz
Federated Learning (FL) is a decentralized machine learning (ML) technique that allows a number of participants to train an ML model collaboratively without having to share their private local datasets with others. When participants are unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), UAV-enabled FL would experience heterogeneity due to the majorly skewed (non-independent and identically distributed -IID) collected data. In addition, UAVs may demonstrate unintentional misbehavior in which the latter may fail to send updates to the FL server due, for instance, to UAVs' disconnectivity from the FL system caused by high mobility, unavailability, or battery depletion. Such challenges may significantly affect the convergence of the FL model. A recent way to tackle these challenges is client selection, based on customized criteria that consider UAV computing power and energy consumption. However, most existing client selection schemes neglected the participants' reliability. Indeed, FL can be targeted by poisoning attacks, in which malicious UAVs upload poisonous local models to the FL server, by either providing targeted false predictions for specifically chosen inputs or by compromising the global model's accuracy through tampering with the local model. Hence, we propose in this paper a novel client selection scheme that enhances convergence by prioritizing fast UAVs with high-reliability scores, while eliminating malicious UAVs from training. Through experiments, we assess the effectiveness of our scheme in resisting different attack scenarios, in terms of convergence and achieved model accuracy. Finally, we demonstrate the performance superiority of the proposed approach compared to baseline methods.
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IP-UNet: Intensity Projection UNet Architecture for 3D Medical Volume Segmentation
Aung, Nyothiri, Kechadi, Tahar, Chen, Liming, Dhelim, Sahraoui
CNNs have been widely applied for medical image analysis. However, limited memory capacity is one of the most common drawbacks of processing high-resolution 3D volumetric data. 3D volumes are usually cropped or downsized first before processing, which can result in a loss of resolution, increase class imbalance, and affect the performance of the segmentation algorithms. In this paper, we propose an end-to-end deep learning approach called IP-UNet. IP-UNet is a UNet-based model that performs multi-class segmentation on Intensity Projection (IP) of 3D volumetric data instead of the memory-consuming 3D volumes. IP-UNet uses limited memory capability for training without losing the original 3D image resolution. We compare the performance of three models in terms of segmentation accuracy and computational cost: 1) Slice-by-slice 2D segmentation of the CT scan images using a conventional 2D UNet model. 2) IP-UNet that operates on data obtained by merging the extracted Maximum Intensity Projection (MIP), Closest Vessel Projection (CVP), and Average Intensity Projection (AvgIP) representations of the source 3D volumes, then applying the UNet model on the output IP images. 3) 3D-UNet model directly reads the 3D volumes constructed from a series of CT scan images and outputs the 3D volume of the predicted segmentation. We test the performance of these methods on 3D volumetric images for automatic breast calcification detection. Experimental results show that IP-Unet can achieve similar segmentation accuracy with 3D-Unet but with much better performance. It reduces the training time by 70\% and memory consumption by 92\%.
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