arab world
Computing in the Arab World: Innovations, Challenges, and Advances amidst a Rich Mosaic of Scientific Activity
Membership in ACM includes a subscription to Communications of the ACM (CACM), the computing industry's most trusted source for staying connected to the world of advanced computing. The Regional Special Section of the Arab World highlights some of the region's exciting, innovative, and socially relevant advances in computing and its applications. It is with great pleasure that we present this Communications of the ACM Regional Special Section of the Arab World. In this second edition, we highlight some of the region's exciting, innovative, and socially relevant advances in computing and its applications. The Arab world is home to a rich mosaic of cultures, histories, and geographies, stretching from the Atlantic Ocean to the Gulf.
- Atlantic Ocean (0.25)
- Asia > Middle East > Qatar (0.06)
- Africa > Middle East > Egypt > Cairo Governorate > Cairo (0.06)
- Media (0.33)
- Information Technology (0.33)
Digital Twins: Initiatives, Technologies, and Use Cases in the Arab World
Membership in ACM includes a subscription to Communications of the ACM (CACM), the computing industry's most trusted source for staying connected to the world of advanced computing. Digital twins (DTs) are virtual replicas of components, assets, systems, or processes, linked to their real-world counterparts, continuously updating their states and simulating their behavior in real-time, as illustrated in Figure 1 . They are adopted for monitoring, predicting, and optimizing the performance of diverse systems, bridging the gap between design, testing and deployment. Significant efforts are being devoted across Arab R&D institutions to export technology tackling challenges that are not only pertinent to the region, but also of global importance, e.g., energy, sustainability, disaster management, healthcare, and urbanization, among many others. For instance, Khalifa University, UAE, is pioneering research into optical wireless communication using DTs.
- Asia > Middle East > UAE (0.24)
- Africa > Middle East > Egypt > Cairo Governorate > Cairo (0.05)
- Asia > Middle East > Saudi Arabia > Mecca Province > Thuwal (0.05)
- (6 more...)
- Health & Medicine (1.00)
- Information Technology > Security & Privacy (0.69)
- Energy > Power Industry (0.69)
- (2 more...)
Combating Misinformation in the Arab World: Challenges and Opportunities
Membership in ACM includes a subscription to Communications of the ACM (CACM), the computing industry's most trusted source for staying connected to the world of advanced computing. Addressing the Arab world's unique challenges against misinformation and disinformation requires efforts at technical, institutional, and social levels. Misinformation and disinformation are global risks. However, the Arab region is particularly vulnerable due to its geopolitical instabilities, linguistic diversity, and other cultural nuances. Misinformation includes false or misleading content, such as rumors, satire taken as fact, or conspiracy theories, while disinformation is the intentional and targeted spread of such content to deceive or manipulate specific audiences. To limit the spread and influence of misinformation, it is essential to advance research on technological methods for early detection, tracking, and mitigation, while also strengthening media literacy and promoting active citizen participation.
- Asia > Middle East > Qatar > Ad-Dawhah > Doha (0.05)
- Asia > Middle East > UAE > Abu Dhabi Emirate > Abu Dhabi (0.04)
- North America > United States > New York (0.04)
- (3 more...)
Artificial Intelligence in Networking Research in the Arab World
Membership in ACM includes a subscription to Communications of the ACM (CACM), the computing industry's most trusted source for staying connected to the world of advanced computing. A look at the Arab world's networking research into intelligent wireless connectivity and intelligent secure networking systems. The past decade has witnessed exponential growth in wireless networks, accompanied by increasing demands for higher data speeds and broader connectivity. As user expectations rise, the existing network infrastructure faces significant challenges related to resource limitations, connectivity quality, and spectrum congestion. These issues have led to performance degradation and have necessitated innovative solutions to ensure sustainable network growth.
- Asia > Middle East > Saudi Arabia (0.04)
- Asia > Middle East > Qatar > Ad-Dawhah > Doha (0.04)
- Telecommunications (1.00)
- Information Technology > Security & Privacy (1.00)
- Energy (0.71)
- Information Technology > Networks (0.69)
Cybersecurity in The Arab World: Technological and Socio-Political Dimensions
Membership in ACM includes a subscription to Communications of the ACM (CACM), the computing industry's most trusted source for staying connected to the world of advanced computing. Interconnected systems have become the backbone of modern societies. However, the very same critical role played by these systems brings significant challenges: Securing interconnected systems is not merely a technological necessity, but a cornerstone for safeguarding the economic, political, and social stability of countries. While these challenges are global, the Arab World presents a unique landscape that warrants a nuanced exploration of both commonalities and peculiarities within the broader context of securing interconnected systems (see Figure for a brief summary of these challenges). Interconnected systems, including cyber-physical systems, often combine computational and physical processes. They include critical infrastructure such as power grids, transportation networks, and healthcare systems, alongside commercial and industrial applications.
- Asia > Middle East > UAE (0.29)
- Europe > United Kingdom (0.14)
- Asia > Middle East > Bahrain (0.14)
- (8 more...)
- Law (1.00)
- Information Technology > Security & Privacy (1.00)
- Energy (1.00)
- Government > Military > Cyberwarfare (0.87)
Trump's landmark deal is the real key to peace in the Middle East
Former Israeli Amb. to the U.S. Michael Oren discusses Iran's nuclear capabilities and negotiations with Hamas to release more hostages on'Fox Report.' The idea that Middle East peace cannot and should not advance without a formal agreement between Israel and the Palestinian Authority is outdated and demonstrably untrue. Indeed, it has done little but exacerbate conflict over the last 30 years and undermine U.S. interests in the region. They provide a new paradigm for peace between Israel and all of its neighbors, including the Palestinians. President Donald Trump obviously deserves the Nobel Peace Prize for breaking with the failed Oslo peace process paradigm still sanctified by legacy media and a bipartisan community of foreign policy elites, and for building new bridges of mutually-beneficial cooperation between Israel and its Arab neighbors.
- North America > United States (1.00)
- Asia > Middle East > Israel (0.86)
- Europe > Middle East (0.42)
- (7 more...)
Combating Misinformation in the Arab World: Challenges & Opportunities
Abouzied, Azza, Alam, Firoj, Ali, Raian, Papotti, Paolo
Misinformation and disinformation pose significant risks globally, with the Arab region facing unique vulnerabilities due to geopolitical instabilities, linguistic diversity, and cultural nuances. We explore these challenges through the key facets of combating misinformation: detection, tracking, mitigation and community-engagement. We shed light on how connecting with grass-roots fact-checking organizations, understanding cultural norms, promoting social correction, and creating strong collaborative information networks can create opportunities for a more resilient information ecosystem in the Arab world.
- Asia > Middle East > UAE > Abu Dhabi Emirate > Abu Dhabi (0.05)
- North America > United States > New York (0.05)
- Asia > Middle East > Qatar > Ad-Dawhah > Doha (0.05)
- (12 more...)
LLM Alignment for the Arabs: A Homogenous Culture or Diverse Ones?
Large language models (LLMs) have the potential of being useful tools that can automate tasks and assist humans. However, these models are more fluent in English and more aligned with Western cultures, norms, and values. Arabic-specific LLMs are being developed to better capture the nuances of the Arabic language, as well as the views of the Arabs. Yet, Arabs are sometimes assumed to share the same culture. In this position paper, I discuss the limitations of this assumption and provide preliminary thoughts for how to build systems that can better represent the cultural diversity within the Arab world. The invalidity of the cultural homogeneity assumption might seem obvious, yet, it is widely adopted in developing multilingual and Arabic-specific LLMs. I hope that this paper will encourage the NLP community to be considerate of the cultural diversity within various communities speaking the same language.
- Asia > Middle East > UAE > Abu Dhabi Emirate > Abu Dhabi (0.14)
- Asia > Thailand > Bangkok > Bangkok (0.06)
- Europe > France > Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur > Bouches-du-Rhône > Marseille (0.05)
- (31 more...)
Commonsense Reasoning in Arab Culture
Sadallah, Abdelrahman, Tonga, Junior Cedric, Almubarak, Khalid, Almheiri, Saeed, Atif, Farah, Qwaider, Chatrine, Kadaoui, Karima, Shatnawi, Sara, Alesh, Yaser, Koto, Fajri
Despite progress in Arabic large language models, such as Jais and AceGPT, their evaluation on commonsense reasoning has largely relied on machine-translated datasets, which lack cultural depth and may introduce Anglocentric biases. Commonsense reasoning is shaped by geographical and cultural contexts, and existing English datasets fail to capture the diversity of the Arab world. To address this, we introduce \datasetname, a commonsense reasoning dataset in Modern Standard Arabic (MSA), covering cultures of 13 countries across the Gulf, Levant, North Africa, and the Nile Valley. The dataset was built from scratch by engaging native speakers to write and validate culturally relevant questions for their respective countries. \datasetname spans 12 daily life domains with 54 fine-grained subtopics, reflecting various aspects of social norms, traditions, and everyday experiences. Zero-shot evaluations show that open-weight language models with up to 32B parameters struggle to comprehend diverse Arab cultures, with performance varying across regions. These findings highlight the need for more culturally aware models and datasets tailored to the Arabic-speaking world.
- Africa > North Africa (0.25)
- Asia > Middle East > UAE > Abu Dhabi Emirate > Abu Dhabi (0.14)
- Asia > Middle East > Jordan (0.05)
- (23 more...)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Representation & Reasoning > Commonsense Reasoning (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Natural Language > Large Language Model (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Machine Learning > Neural Networks > Deep Learning (0.96)
Desert Camels and Oil Sheikhs: Arab-Centric Red Teaming of Frontier LLMs
Saeed, Muhammed, Mohamed, Elgizouli, Mohamed, Mukhtar, Raza, Shaina, Abdul-Mageed, Muhammad, Shehata, Shady
Large language models (LLMs) are widely used but raise ethical concerns due to embedded social biases. This study examines LLM biases against Arabs versus Westerners across eight domains, including women's rights, terrorism, and anti-Semitism and assesses model resistance to perpetuating these biases. To this end, we create two datasets: one to evaluate LLM bias toward Arabs versus Westerners and another to test model safety against prompts that exaggerate negative traits ("jailbreaks"). We evaluate six LLMs -- GPT-4, GPT-4o, LlaMA 3.1 (8B & 405B), Mistral 7B, and Claude 3.5 Sonnet. We find 79% of cases displaying negative biases toward Arabs, with LlaMA 3.1-405B being the most biased. Our jailbreak tests reveal GPT-4o as the most vulnerable, despite being an optimized version, followed by LlaMA 3.1-8B and Mistral 7B. All LLMs except Claude exhibit attack success rates above 87% in three categories. We also find Claude 3.5 Sonnet the safest, but it still displays biases in seven of eight categories. Despite being an optimized version of GPT4, We find GPT-4o to be more prone to biases and jailbreaks, suggesting optimization flaws. Our findings underscore the pressing need for more robust bias mitigation strategies and strengthened security measures in LLMs.
- Asia > Middle East > Oman (0.46)
- Asia > Middle East > Qatar (0.28)
- Asia > Middle East > Kuwait (0.28)
- (34 more...)
- Media (1.00)
- Law > Civil Rights & Constitutional Law (1.00)
- Law Enforcement & Public Safety > Terrorism (1.00)
- (7 more...)