Osun State
An End-to-End System for Culturally-Attuned Driving Feedback using a Dual-Component NLG Engine
Thompson, Iniakpokeikiye Peter, Dewei, Yi, Ehud, Reiter
This paper presents an end-to-end mobile system that delivers culturally-attuned safe driving feedback to drivers in Nigeria, a low-resource environment with significant infrastructural challenges. The core of the system is a novel dual-component Natural Language Generation (NLG) engine that provides both legally-grounded safety tips and persuasive, theory-driven behavioural reports. We describe the complete system architecture, including an automatic trip detection service, on-device behaviour analysis, and a sophisticated NLG pipeline that leverages a two-step reflection process to ensure high-quality feedback. The system also integrates a specialized machine learning model for detecting alcohol-influenced driving, a key local safety issue. The architecture is engineered for robustness against intermittent connectivity and noisy sensor data. A pilot deployment with 90 drivers demonstrates the viability of our approach, and initial results on detected unsafe behaviours are presented. This work provides a framework for applying data-to-text and AI systems to achieve social good.
- Europe > United Kingdom > Scotland > City of Aberdeen > Aberdeen (0.05)
- North America > Canada > Ontario > Toronto (0.04)
- Africa > Nigeria > Osun State > Ile-Ife (0.04)
Natural language processing for African languages
Recent advances in word embeddings and language models use large-scale, unlabelled data and self-supervised learning to boost NLP performance. Multilingual models, often trained on web-sourced data like Wikipedia, face challenges: few low-resource languages are included, their data is often noisy, and lack of labeled datasets makes it hard to evaluate performance outside high-resource languages like English. In this dissertation, we focus on languages spoken in Sub-Saharan Africa where all the indigenous languages in this region can be regarded as low-resourced in terms of the availability of labelled data for NLP tasks and unlabelled data found on the web. We analyse the noise in the publicly available corpora, and curate a high-quality corpus, demonstrating that the quality of semantic representations learned in word embeddings does not only depend on the amount of data but on the quality of pre-training data. We demonstrate empirically the limitations of word embeddings, and the opportunities the multilingual pre-trained language model (PLM) offers especially for languages unseen during pre-training and low-resource scenarios. We further study how to adapt and specialize multilingual PLMs to unseen African languages using a small amount of monolingual texts. To address the under-representation of the African languages in NLP research, we developed large scale human-annotated labelled datasets for 21 African languages in two impactful NLP tasks: named entity recognition and machine translation. We conduct an extensive empirical evaluation using state-of-the-art methods across supervised, weakly-supervised, and transfer learning settings.
- Africa > Sub-Saharan Africa (0.24)
- North America > United States > Minnesota > Hennepin County > Minneapolis (0.14)
- Africa > Sudan (0.14)
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- Media > News (1.00)
- Information Technology (1.00)
- Government > Regional Government (1.00)
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Unveiling Cultural Blind Spots: Analyzing the Limitations of mLLMs in Procedural Text Comprehension
Yari, Amir Hossein, Koto, Fajri
Despite the impressive performance of multilingual large language models (mLLMs) in various natural language processing tasks, their ability to understand procedural texts, particularly those with culture-specific content, remains largely unexplored. Texts describing cultural procedures, including rituals, traditional craftsmanship, and social etiquette, require an inherent understanding of cultural context, presenting a significant challenge for mLLMs. In this work, we introduce CAPTex, a benchmark designed to evaluate mLLMs' ability to process and reason about culturally diverse procedural texts across multiple languages using various methodologies to assess their performance. Our findings indicate that (1) mLLMs face difficulties with culturally contextualized procedural texts, showing notable performance declines in low-resource languages, (2) model performance fluctuates across cultural domains, with some areas presenting greater difficulties, and (3) language models exhibit better performance on multiple-choice tasks within conversational frameworks compared to direct questioning. These results underscore the current limitations of mLLMs in handling culturally nuanced procedural texts and highlight the need for culturally aware benchmarks like CAPTex to enhance their adaptability and comprehension across diverse linguistic and cultural landscapes.
- North America > United States > Minnesota > Hennepin County > Minneapolis (0.14)
- Asia > Middle East > Iran (0.04)
- Asia > Japan (0.04)
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- Leisure & Entertainment (1.00)
- Education (1.00)
Prompt-oriented Output of Culture-Specific Items in Translated African Poetry by Large Language Model: An Initial Multi-layered Tabular Review
This paper examines the output of cultural items generated by Chat Generative PreTrained Transformer Pro in response to three structured prompts to translate three anthologies of African poetry. The first prompt was broad, the second focused on poetic structure, and the third prompt emphasized cultural specificity. To support this analysis, four comparative tables were created. The first table presents the results of the cultural items produced after the three prompts, the second categorizes these outputs based on Aixela framework of Proper nouns and Common expressions, the third table summarizes the cultural items generated by human translators, a custom translation engine, and a Large Language Model. The final table outlines the strategies employed by Chat Generative PreTrained Transformer Pro following the culture specific prompt. Compared to the outputs of cultural items from reference human translation and the custom translation engine in prior studies the findings indicate that the culture oriented prompts used with Chat Generative PreTrained Transformer Pro did not yield significant enhancements of cultural items during the translation of African poetry from English to French. Among the fifty four cultural items, the human translation produced thirty three cultural items in repetition, the custom translation engine generated Thirty eight cultural items in repetition while Chat Generative PreTrained Transformer Pro produced forty one cultural items in repetition. The untranslated cultural items revealed inconsistencies in Large language models approach to translating cultural items in African poetry from English to French.
- Africa > Nigeria > Osun State > Ile-Ife (0.06)
- North America > United States > New York (0.05)
- Europe > United Kingdom > England > Oxfordshire > Oxford (0.04)
- (4 more...)
Design and Implementation of English To Yor\`ub\'a Verb Phrase Machine Translation System
Ajibade, Benjamin, Eludiora, Safiriyu
Despite the population of speakers, Yorùbá is still considered as a low The advancement in Natural language resource language (for which few language Processing (NLP) can be attributed to recent resources exist), making it very difficult for the improvements in the strategy and techniques of development of more advanced models such as the large data collection, archiving, analysis, and Neural Machine model that requires large volumes visualization. NLP began in the '50s as machine of data. With the number of speakers, translating translation (MT), intended to aid in code-breaking the language to other widely spoken languages was during World War II although the translations were not initially emphasized. However, recent not successful, these early stages of MT were linguistic researchers are taking up the challenges necessary stepping stones on the way to more by giving more attention (as compared to the highresource sophisticated technologies (Zhang, 2018; Quinn, language of the Western World).
Artificial intelligence based prediction on lung cancer risk factors using deep learning
Sohaib, Muhammad, Adewunmi, Mary
In this proposed work, we identified the significant research issues on lung cancer risk factors. Capturing and defining symptoms at an early stage is one of the most difficult phases for patients. Based on the history of patients records, we reviewed a number of current research studies on lung cancer and its various stages. We identified that lung cancer is one of the significant research issues in predicting the early stages of cancer disease. This research aimed to develop a model that can detect lung cancer with a remarkably high level of accuracy using the deep learning approach (convolution neural network). This method considers and resolves significant gaps in previous studies. We compare the accuracy levels and loss values of our model with VGG16, InceptionV3, and Resnet50. We found that our model achieved an accuracy of 94% and a minimum loss of 0.1%. Hence physicians can use our convolution neural network models for predicting lung cancer risk factors in the real world. Moreover, this investigation reveals that squamous cell carcinoma, normal, adenocarcinoma, and large cell carcinoma are the most significant risk factors. In addition, the remaining attributes are also crucial for achieving the best performance.
- Asia > China > Tianjin Province > Tianjin (0.05)
- Oceania > Australia > Tasmania > Hobart (0.04)
- North America > United States (0.04)
- (4 more...)
- Research Report > New Finding (0.47)
- Research Report > Experimental Study (0.46)
Knowledge of artificial intelligence must be domesticated – Experts
Experts have suggested that the knowledge of Artificial Intelligence must be domesticated in Nigeria for the nation to meet up with the world. The experts explained that government, academia, community, and private sector must come together to rejuvenate Artificial Intelligence knowledge. This was disclosed during an annual lecture by the College of Science, Engineering and Technology, Osun State University, in honour of its pioneer Provost, Prof'Diran Famurewa held at the institution's Auditorium in Osogbo on Thursday. The Vice-Chancellor of Summit University Offa, Kwara, Prof. Abiodun Musa, professor of Mechatronics and who was the guest lecturer said Nigerian universities must not only generate money, but they must generate knowledge to solve community problems and needs as students must learn to solve community problems. The Vice-Chancellor, who is also an expert in Artificial Intelligence and Robotics, explained that if Nigeria needs to go beyond user to developer, it needs to rejuvenate artificial intelligence by looking into curriculum and implementation.
- North America > United States (0.27)
- Africa > Nigeria > Osun State > Osogbo (0.27)
- Europe > Ireland (0.07)
Federated Learning Enables Big Data for Rare Cancer Boundary Detection
Pati, Sarthak, Baid, Ujjwal, Edwards, Brandon, Sheller, Micah, Wang, Shih-Han, Reina, G Anthony, Foley, Patrick, Gruzdev, Alexey, Karkada, Deepthi, Davatzikos, Christos, Sako, Chiharu, Ghodasara, Satyam, Bilello, Michel, Mohan, Suyash, Vollmuth, Philipp, Brugnara, Gianluca, Preetha, Chandrakanth J, Sahm, Felix, Maier-Hein, Klaus, Zenk, Maximilian, Bendszus, Martin, Wick, Wolfgang, Calabrese, Evan, Rudie, Jeffrey, Villanueva-Meyer, Javier, Cha, Soonmee, Ingalhalikar, Madhura, Jadhav, Manali, Pandey, Umang, Saini, Jitender, Garrett, John, Larson, Matthew, Jeraj, Robert, Currie, Stuart, Frood, Russell, Fatania, Kavi, Huang, Raymond Y, Chang, Ken, Balana, Carmen, Capellades, Jaume, Puig, Josep, Trenkler, Johannes, Pichler, Josef, Necker, Georg, Haunschmidt, Andreas, Meckel, Stephan, Shukla, Gaurav, Liem, Spencer, Alexander, Gregory S, Lombardo, Joseph, Palmer, Joshua D, Flanders, Adam E, Dicker, Adam P, Sair, Haris I, Jones, Craig K, Venkataraman, Archana, Jiang, Meirui, So, Tiffany Y, Chen, Cheng, Heng, Pheng Ann, Dou, Qi, Kozubek, Michal, Lux, Filip, Michálek, Jan, Matula, Petr, Keřkovský, Miloš, Kopřivová, Tereza, Dostál, Marek, Vybíhal, Václav, Vogelbaum, Michael A, Mitchell, J Ross, Farinhas, Joaquim, Maldjian, Joseph A, Yogananda, Chandan Ganesh Bangalore, Pinho, Marco C, Reddy, Divya, Holcomb, James, Wagner, Benjamin C, Ellingson, Benjamin M, Cloughesy, Timothy F, Raymond, Catalina, Oughourlian, Talia, Hagiwara, Akifumi, Wang, Chencai, To, Minh-Son, Bhardwaj, Sargam, Chong, Chee, Agzarian, Marc, Falcão, Alexandre Xavier, Martins, Samuel B, Teixeira, Bernardo C A, Sprenger, Flávia, Menotti, David, Lucio, Diego R, LaMontagne, Pamela, Marcus, Daniel, Wiestler, Benedikt, Kofler, Florian, Ezhov, Ivan, Metz, Marie, Jain, Rajan, Lee, Matthew, Lui, Yvonne W, McKinley, Richard, Slotboom, Johannes, Radojewski, Piotr, Meier, Raphael, Wiest, Roland, Murcia, Derrick, Fu, Eric, Haas, Rourke, Thompson, John, Ormond, David Ryan, Badve, Chaitra, Sloan, Andrew E, Vadmal, Vachan, Waite, Kristin, Colen, Rivka R, Pei, Linmin, Ak, Murat, Srinivasan, Ashok, Bapuraj, J Rajiv, Rao, Arvind, Wang, Nicholas, Yoshiaki, Ota, Moritani, Toshio, Turk, Sevcan, Lee, Joonsang, Prabhudesai, Snehal, Morón, Fanny, Mandel, Jacob, Kamnitsas, Konstantinos, Glocker, Ben, Dixon, Luke V M, Williams, Matthew, Zampakis, Peter, Panagiotopoulos, Vasileios, Tsiganos, Panagiotis, Alexiou, Sotiris, Haliassos, Ilias, Zacharaki, Evangelia I, Moustakas, Konstantinos, Kalogeropoulou, Christina, Kardamakis, Dimitrios M, Choi, Yoon Seong, Lee, Seung-Koo, Chang, Jong Hee, Ahn, Sung Soo, Luo, Bing, Poisson, Laila, Wen, Ning, Tiwari, Pallavi, Verma, Ruchika, Bareja, Rohan, Yadav, Ipsa, Chen, Jonathan, Kumar, Neeraj, Smits, Marion, van der Voort, Sebastian R, Alafandi, Ahmed, Incekara, Fatih, Wijnenga, Maarten MJ, Kapsas, Georgios, Gahrmann, Renske, Schouten, Joost W, Dubbink, Hendrikus J, Vincent, Arnaud JPE, Bent, Martin J van den, French, Pim J, Klein, Stefan, Yuan, Yading, Sharma, Sonam, Tseng, Tzu-Chi, Adabi, Saba, Niclou, Simone P, Keunen, Olivier, Hau, Ann-Christin, Vallières, Martin, Fortin, David, Lepage, Martin, Landman, Bennett, Ramadass, Karthik, Xu, Kaiwen, Chotai, Silky, Chambless, Lola B, Mistry, Akshitkumar, Thompson, Reid C, Gusev, Yuriy, Bhuvaneshwar, Krithika, Sayah, Anousheh, Bencheqroun, Camelia, Belouali, Anas, Madhavan, Subha, Booth, Thomas C, Chelliah, Alysha, Modat, Marc, Shuaib, Haris, Dragos, Carmen, Abayazeed, Aly, Kolodziej, Kenneth, Hill, Michael, Abbassy, Ahmed, Gamal, Shady, Mekhaimar, Mahmoud, Qayati, Mohamed, Reyes, Mauricio, Park, Ji Eun, Yun, Jihye, Kim, Ho Sung, Mahajan, Abhishek, Muzi, Mark, Benson, Sean, Beets-Tan, Regina G H, Teuwen, Jonas, Herrera-Trujillo, Alejandro, Trujillo, Maria, Escobar, William, Abello, Ana, Bernal, Jose, Gómez, Jhon, Choi, Joseph, Baek, Stephen, Kim, Yusung, Ismael, Heba, Allen, Bryan, Buatti, John M, Kotrotsou, Aikaterini, Li, Hongwei, Weiss, Tobias, Weller, Michael, Bink, Andrea, Pouymayou, Bertrand, Shaykh, Hassan F, Saltz, Joel, Prasanna, Prateek, Shrestha, Sampurna, Mani, Kartik M, Payne, David, Kurc, Tahsin, Pelaez, Enrique, Franco-Maldonado, Heydy, Loayza, Francis, Quevedo, Sebastian, Guevara, Pamela, Torche, Esteban, Mendoza, Cristobal, Vera, Franco, Ríos, Elvis, López, Eduardo, Velastin, Sergio A, Ogbole, Godwin, Oyekunle, Dotun, Odafe-Oyibotha, Olubunmi, Osobu, Babatunde, Shu'aibu, Mustapha, Dorcas, Adeleye, Soneye, Mayowa, Dako, Farouk, Simpson, Amber L, Hamghalam, Mohammad, Peoples, Jacob J, Hu, Ricky, Tran, Anh, Cutler, Danielle, Moraes, Fabio Y, Boss, Michael A, Gimpel, James, Veettil, Deepak Kattil, Schmidt, Kendall, Bialecki, Brian, Marella, Sailaja, Price, Cynthia, Cimino, Lisa, Apgar, Charles, Shah, Prashant, Menze, Bjoern, Barnholtz-Sloan, Jill S, Martin, Jason, Bakas, Spyridon
Although machine learning (ML) has shown promise in numerous domains, there are concerns about generalizability to out-of-sample data. This is currently addressed by centrally sharing ample, and importantly diverse, data from multiple sites. However, such centralization is challenging to scale (or even not feasible) due to various limitations. Federated ML (FL) provides an alternative to train accurate and generalizable ML models, by only sharing numerical model updates. Here we present findings from the largest FL study to-date, involving data from 71 healthcare institutions across 6 continents, to generate an automatic tumor boundary detector for the rare disease of glioblastoma, utilizing the largest dataset of such patients ever used in the literature (25, 256 MRI scans from 6, 314 patients). We demonstrate a 33% improvement over a publicly trained model to delineate the surgically targetable tumor, and 23% improvement over the tumor's entire extent. We anticipate our study to: 1) enable more studies in healthcare informed by large and diverse data, ensuring meaningful results for rare diseases and underrepresented populations, 2) facilitate further quantitative analyses for glioblastoma via performance optimization of our consensus model for eventual public release, and 3) demonstrate the effectiveness of FL at such scale and task complexity as a paradigm shift for multi-site collaborations, alleviating the need for data sharing.
- North America > United States > California > Los Angeles County > Los Angeles (0.28)
- North America > United States > California > San Francisco County > San Francisco (0.28)
- North America > United States > Pennsylvania > Philadelphia County > Philadelphia (0.15)
- (70 more...)
- Research Report > Strength High (1.00)
- Research Report > New Finding (1.00)
- Research Report > Experimental Study (1.00)
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area > Oncology (1.00)
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area > Neurology (1.00)
- Health & Medicine > Diagnostic Medicine > Imaging (1.00)
- Government > Regional Government > North America Government > United States Government (1.00)
A Fast Edge-Based Synchronizer for Tasks in Real-Time Artificial Intelligence Applications
Olaniyan, Richard, Maheswaran, Muthucumaru
Real-time artificial intelligence (AI) applications mapped onto edge computing need to perform data capture, process data, and device actuation within given bounds while using the available devices. Task synchronization across the devices is an important problem that affects the timely progress of an AI application by determining the quality of the captured data, time to process the data, and the quality of actuation. In this paper, we develop a fast edge-based synchronization scheme that can time align the execution of input-output tasks as well compute tasks. The primary idea of the fast synchronizer is to cluster the devices into groups that are highly synchronized in their task executions and statically determine few synchronization points using a game-theoretic solver. The cluster of devices use a late notification protocol to select the best point among the pre-computed synchronization points to reach a time aligned task execution as quickly as possible. We evaluate the performance of our synchronization scheme using trace-driven simulations and we compare the performance with existing distributed synchronization schemes for real-time AI application tasks. We implement our synchronization scheme and compare its training accuracy and training time with other parameter server synchronization frameworks.
- North America > Canada > Quebec > Montreal (0.14)
- North America > United States > Indiana > Tippecanoe County > West Lafayette (0.04)
- North America > United States > Indiana > Tippecanoe County > Lafayette (0.04)
- Africa > Nigeria > Osun State > Ile-Ife (0.04)
From Kigali to Khartoum: Africa's drone revolution
Drones, or unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV), have been used for more than three decades, but in the last few years drones are increasingly being developed and used for commercial purposes. But while inventors and entrepreneurs in Western countries struggle with strict regulations, many African countries are proving very innovative and accepting in terms of drone usage across industries. From Kigali to Khartoum, pioneers are using drones to tackle some of the continent's current challenges. In Rwanda, drones deliver blood to almost half of the country's blood transfusion centres. In Malawi, UAVs deliver HIV test kits to and from remote parts of the country.