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 Kaduna State


The Rise of AfricaNLP: Contributions, Contributors, and Community Impact (2005-2025)

Belay, Tadesse Destaw, Hussen, Kedir Yassin, Imam, Sukairaj Hafiz, Ahmad, Ibrahim Said, Inuwa-Dutse, Isa, Haile, Abrham Belete, Sidorov, Grigori, Ameer, Iqra, Abdulmumin, Idris, Gwadabe, Tajuddeen, Marivate, Vukosi, Yimam, Seid Muhie, Muhammad, Shamsuddeen Hassan

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Natural Language Processing (NLP) is undergoing constant transformation, as Large Language Models (LLMs) are driving daily breakthroughs in research and practice. In this regard, tracking the progress of NLP research and automatically analyzing the contributions of research papers provides key insights into the nature of the field and the researchers. This study explores the progress of African NLP (AfricaNLP) by asking (and answering) basic research questions such as: i) How has the nature of NLP evolved over the last two decades?, ii) What are the contributions of AfricaNLP papers?, and iii) Which individuals and organizations (authors, affiliated institutions, and funding bodies) have been involved in the development of AfricaNLP? We quantitatively examine the contributions of AfricaNLP research using 1.9K NLP paper abstracts, 4.9K author contributors, and 7.8K human-annotated contribution sentences (AfricaNLPContributions) along with benchmark results. Our dataset and continuously existing NLP progress tracking website provide a powerful lens for tracing AfricaNLP research trends and hold potential for generating data-driven literature surveys.


Multi-Agent Reinforcement Learning in Intelligent Transportation Systems: A Comprehensive Survey

Donatus, RexCharles, Ter, Kumater, Ajayi, Ore-Ofe, Udekwe, Daniel

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

The growing complexity of urban mobility and the demand for efficient, sustainable, and adaptive solutions have positioned Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) at the forefront of modern infrastructure innovation. At the core of ITS lies the challenge of autonomous decision-making across dynamic, large scale, and uncertain environments where multiple agents traffic signals, autonomous vehicles, or fleet units must coordinate effectively. Multi Agent Reinforcement Learning (MARL) offers a promising paradigm for addressing these challenges by enabling distributed agents to jointly learn optimal strategies that balance individual objectives with system wide efficiency. This paper presents a comprehensive survey of MARL applications in ITS. We introduce a structured taxonomy that categorizes MARL approaches according to coordination models and learning algorithms, spanning value based, policy based, actor critic, and communication enhanced frameworks. Applications are reviewed across key ITS domains, including traffic signal control, connected and autonomous vehicle coordination, logistics optimization, and mobility on demand systems. Furthermore, we highlight widely used simulation platforms such as SUMO, CARLA, and CityFlow that support MARL experimentation, along with emerging benchmarks. The survey also identifies core challenges, including scalability, non stationarity, credit assignment, communication constraints, and the sim to real transfer gap, which continue to hinder real world deployment.


When Simpler Wins: Facebooks Prophet vs LSTM for Air Pollution Forecasting in Data-Constrained Northern Nigeria

Balogun, Habeeb, Zakari, Yahaya

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Air pollution forecasting is critical for proactive environmental management, yet data irregularities and scarcity remain major challenges in low-resource regions. Northern Nigeria faces high levels of air pollutants, but few studies have systematically compared the performance of advanced machine learning models under such constraints. This study evaluates Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) networks and the Facebook Prophet model for forecasting multiple pollutants (CO, SO2, SO4) using monthly observational data from 2018 to 2023 across 19 states. Results show that Prophet often matches or exceeds LSTM's accuracy, particularly in series dominated by seasonal and long-term trends, while LSTM performs better in datasets with abrupt structural changes. These findings challenge the assumption that deep learning models inherently outperform simpler approaches, highlighting the importance of model-data alignment. For policymakers and practitioners in resource-constrained settings, this work supports adopting context-sensitive, computationally efficient forecasting methods over complexity for its own sake.


HausaNLP at SemEval-2025 Task 11: Hausa Text Emotion Detection

Sani, Sani Abdullahi, Abubakar, Salim, Lawan, Falalu Ibrahim, Abubakar, Abdulhamid, Bala, Maryam

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

This paper presents our approach to multi-label emotion detection in Hausa, a low-resource African language, for SemEval Track A. We fine-tuned AfriBERTa, a transformer-based model pre-trained on African languages, to classify Hausa text into six emotions: anger, disgust, fear, joy, sadness, and surprise. Our methodology involved data preprocessing, tokenization, and model fine-tuning using the Hugging Face Trainer API. The system achieved a validation accuracy of 74.00%, with an F1-score of 73.50%, demonstrating the effectiveness of transformer-based models for emotion detection in low-resource languages.


Identifying and Investigating Global News Coverage of Critical Events Such as Disasters and Terrorist Attacks

Cai, Erica, Chen, Xi, Keeney, Reagan Grey, Zuckerman, Ethan, O'Connor, Brendan, Grabowicz, Przemyslaw A.

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Comparative studies of news coverage are challenging to conduct because methods to identify news articles about the same event in different languages require expertise that is difficult to scale. We introduce an AI-powered method for identifying news articles based on an event FINGERPRINT, which is a minimal set of metadata required to identify critical events. Our event coverage identification method, FINGERPRINT TO ARTICLE MATCHING FOR EVENTS (FAME), efficiently identifies news articles about critical world events, specifically terrorist attacks and several types of natural disasters. FAME does not require training data and is able to automatically and efficiently identify news articles that discuss an event given its fingerprint: time, location, and class (such as storm or flood). The method achieves state-of-the-art performance and scales to massive databases of tens of millions of news articles and hundreds of events happening globally. We use FAME to identify 27,441 articles that cover 470 natural disaster and terrorist attack events that happened in 2020. To this end, we use a massive database of news articles in three languages from MediaCloud, and three widely used, expert-curated databases of critical events: EM-DAT, USGS, and GTD. Our case study reveals patterns consistent with prior literature: coverage of disasters and terrorist attacks correlates to death counts, to the GDP of a country where the event occurs, and to trade volume between the reporting country and the country where the event occurred. We share our NLP annotations and cross-country media attention data to support the efforts of researchers and media monitoring organizations.


HausaNLP at SemEval-2025 Task 2: Entity-Aware Fine-tuning vs. Prompt Engineering in Entity-Aware Machine Translation

Abubakar, Abdulhamid, Abdulkadir, Hamidatu, Abdullahi, Ibrahim Rabiu, Khalid, Abubakar Auwal, Wali, Ahmad Mustapha, Umar, Amina Aminu, Bala, Maryam, Sani, Sani Abdullahi, Ahmad, Ibrahim Said, Muhammad, Shamsuddeen Hassan, Abdulmumin, Idris, Marivate, Vukosi

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

This paper presents our findings for SemEval 2025 Task 2, a shared task on entity-aware machine translation (EA-MT). The goal of this task is to develop translation models that can accurately translate English sentences into target languages, with a particular focus on handling named entities, which often pose challenges for MT systems. The task covers 10 target languages with English as the source. In this paper, we describe the different systems we employed, detail our results, and discuss insights gained from our experiments.


How drones killed nearly 1,000 civilians in Africa in three years

Al Jazeera

The use of drones by several African countries in their fight against armed groups is causing significant harm to civilians, according to a new report. More than 943 civilians have been killed in at least 50 incidents across six African countries from November 2021 to November 2024, according to the report by Drone Wars UK. The report, titled Death on Delivery, reveals that strikes regularly fail to distinguish between civilians and combatants in their operations. Experts told Al Jazeera that the death toll is likely only the tip of the iceberg because many countries run secretive drone campaigns. As drones rapidly become the weapon of choice for governments across the continent, what are the consequences for civilians in conflict zones?


BRIGHTER: BRIdging the Gap in Human-Annotated Textual Emotion Recognition Datasets for 28 Languages

Muhammad, Shamsuddeen Hassan, Ousidhoum, Nedjma, Abdulmumin, Idris, Wahle, Jan Philip, Ruas, Terry, Beloucif, Meriem, de Kock, Christine, Surange, Nirmal, Teodorescu, Daniela, Ahmad, Ibrahim Said, Adelani, David Ifeoluwa, Aji, Alham Fikri, Ali, Felermino D. M. A., Alimova, Ilseyar, Araujo, Vladimir, Babakov, Nikolay, Baes, Naomi, Bucur, Ana-Maria, Bukula, Andiswa, Cao, Guanqun, Cardenas, Rodrigo Tufino, Chevi, Rendi, Chukwuneke, Chiamaka Ijeoma, Ciobotaru, Alexandra, Dementieva, Daryna, Gadanya, Murja Sani, Geislinger, Robert, Gipp, Bela, Hourrane, Oumaima, Ignat, Oana, Lawan, Falalu Ibrahim, Mabuya, Rooweither, Mahendra, Rahmad, Marivate, Vukosi, Piper, Andrew, Panchenko, Alexander, Ferreira, Charles Henrique Porto, Protasov, Vitaly, Rutunda, Samuel, Shrivastava, Manish, Udrea, Aura Cristina, Wanzare, Lilian Diana Awuor, Wu, Sophie, Wunderlich, Florian Valentin, Zhafran, Hanif Muhammad, Zhang, Tianhui, Zhou, Yi, Mohammad, Saif M.

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

People worldwide use language in subtle and complex ways to express emotions. While emotion recognition -- an umbrella term for several NLP tasks -- significantly impacts different applications in NLP and other fields, most work in the area is focused on high-resource languages. Therefore, this has led to major disparities in research and proposed solutions, especially for low-resource languages that suffer from the lack of high-quality datasets. In this paper, we present BRIGHTER-- a collection of multilabeled emotion-annotated datasets in 28 different languages. BRIGHTER covers predominantly low-resource languages from Africa, Asia, Eastern Europe, and Latin America, with instances from various domains annotated by fluent speakers. We describe the data collection and annotation processes and the challenges of building these datasets. Then, we report different experimental results for monolingual and crosslingual multi-label emotion identification, as well as intensity-level emotion recognition. We investigate results with and without using LLMs and analyse the large variability in performance across languages and text domains. We show that BRIGHTER datasets are a step towards bridging the gap in text-based emotion recognition and discuss their impact and utility.


VLMs as GeoGuessr Masters: Exceptional Performance, Hidden Biases, and Privacy Risks

Huang, Jingyuan, Huang, Jen-tse, Liu, Ziyi, Liu, Xiaoyuan, Wang, Wenxuan, Zhao, Jieyu

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Visual-Language Models (VLMs) have shown remarkable performance across various tasks, particularly in recognizing geographic information from images. However, significant challenges remain, including biases and privacy concerns. To systematically address these issues in the context of geographic information recognition, we introduce a benchmark dataset consisting of 1,200 images paired with detailed geographic metadata. Evaluating four VLMs, we find that while these models demonstrate the ability to recognize geographic information from images, achieving up to $53.8\%$ accuracy in city prediction, they exhibit significant regional biases. Specifically, performance is substantially higher for economically developed and densely populated regions compared to less developed ($-12.5\%$) and sparsely populated ($-17.0\%$) areas. Moreover, the models exhibit regional biases, frequently overpredicting certain locations; for instance, they consistently predict Sydney for images taken in Australia. The strong performance of VLMs also raises privacy concerns, particularly for users who share images online without the intent of being identified. Our code and dataset are publicly available at https://github.com/uscnlp-lime/FairLocator.


Improving the accuracy of food security predictions by integrating conflict data

Bertetti, Marco, Agnolucci, Paolo, Calzadilla, Alvaro, Capra, Licia

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Food security (FS) is a complex and multifaceted problem, influenced by several factors such as weather events, economic shocks, and natural disasters. Understanding the dynamics of food security is crucial for effective policymaking and humanitarian efforts. While conflicts and violent events increasingly stand out as key drivers of food crises[1], the depth of their impact remains largely underexplored. Examining the quantitative aspects of this impact is essential for developing more targeted interventions and strategies to address the complex interplay between conflict and food security. Existing research tends to be qualitative in nature (Kemmerling et al.2022; Brown et al. 2020; Brown et al. 2021), leaving a significant gap in understanding the quantitative aspects of how conflicts impact FS levels. By delving into quantitative analyses, we can not only enhance our comprehension of the magnitude of the problem but also pave the way for evidence-based decision-making in efforts to alleviate food insecurity in conflict-affected regions. Regarding the qualitative study of conflicts and FS, Kemmerling et al.(2022)[2] provided a comprehensive explanation on how violence and armed conflicts impact FS through destruction, displacement, financing of conflicts and food being used as a weapon. The authors call for better conflict data collection, and an increase in focus on the study of conflicts early warnings.