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Dr. J. K. Vijayakumar elected to International Association of University Libraries board of directors

KAUST ·

KAUST Library Director Dr. J. K. Vijayakumar has been elected to the board of directors of the International Association of University Libraries (IATUL). KAUST has been a member of IATUL since 2009, which provides a forum for library directors to discuss library service development. IATUL's president noted Vijayakumar was well-suited to foster IATUL's ambition to serve as a bridge between cultures. Why it matters: This appointment recognizes KAUST's growing role in international academic collaborations and knowledge sharing.

Cultural inclusivity in AI: A new benchmark dataset on 100 languages

MBZUAI ·

MBZUAI researchers have released ALM Bench, a new benchmark dataset for evaluating the performance of multimodal LLMs on cultural visual question-answer tasks across 100 languages. The dataset includes over 22,000 question-answer pairs across 19 categories, with a focus on low-resource languages and cultural nuances, including three Arabic dialects. They tested 16 open- and closed-source multimodal LLMs on it, revealing a significant need for greater cultural and linguistic inclusivity. Why it matters: The benchmark aims to improve the inclusivity of multimodal AI systems by addressing the underrepresentation of low-resource languages and cultural contexts.

Time Travel: A Comprehensive Benchmark to Evaluate LMMs on Historical and Cultural Artifacts

arXiv ·

Researchers introduce TimeTravel, a benchmark dataset for evaluating large multimodal models (LMMs) on historical and cultural artifacts. The benchmark comprises 10,250 expert-verified samples across 266 cultures and 10 historical regions, designed to assess AI in tasks like classification and interpretation of manuscripts, artworks, inscriptions, and archaeological discoveries. The goal is to establish AI as a reliable partner in preserving cultural heritage and assisting researchers.

Developing and Validating the Arabic Version of the Attitudes Toward Large Language Models Scale

arXiv ·

This paper presents the development and validation of an Arabic version of the Attitudes Toward Large Language Models (AT-GLLM and AT-PLLM) scales, adapted from the original English versions. The study involved translating the scales and testing them on a sample of 249 Arabic-speaking adults. The translated scales demonstrated strong psychometric properties, including a two-factor structure, measurement invariance across genders, and good reliability and validity. Why it matters: This provides a culturally relevant tool for assessing attitudes toward LLMs in the Arab world, crucial for localized research and policy-making in the rapidly growing field of Arabic AI.