MohammadAli SadraeiJavaheri
Also published as: Mohammad Ali Sadraei Javaheri, Mohammad Ali Sadraei
2025
Tooka-SBERT: Lightweight Sentence Embedding models for Persian
Ghazal Zamaninejad | MohammadAli SadraeiJavaheri | Farnaz Aghababaloo | Hamideh Rafiee | Milad Molazadeh Oskuee | AmirMohammad Salehoof
Proceedings of the 14th International Joint Conference on Natural Language Processing and the 4th Conference of the Asia-Pacific Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics
Ghazal Zamaninejad | MohammadAli SadraeiJavaheri | Farnaz Aghababaloo | Hamideh Rafiee | Milad Molazadeh Oskuee | AmirMohammad Salehoof
Proceedings of the 14th International Joint Conference on Natural Language Processing and the 4th Conference of the Asia-Pacific Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics
We introduce Tooka-SBERT, a family of Persian sentence embedding models designed to enhance semantic understanding for Persian. The models are released in two sizes—Small (123M parameters) and Large (353M parameters)—both built upon the TookaBERT backbone. Tooka-SBERT is pretrained on the Targoman News corpus and fine-tuned using high-quality synthetic Persian sentence pair datasets to improve semantic alignment. We evaluate Tooka-SBERT on PTEB, a Persian adaptation of the MTEB benchmark, where the Large model achieves an average score of 70.54% and the Small model 69.49%, outperforming some strong multilingual baselines. Tooka-SBERT provides a compact and high-performing open-source solution for Persian sentence representation, with efficient inference suitable for both GPU and CPU environments. Our models are publicly available on Hugging Face, and the corresponding benchmark results can be viewed on the PTEB Leaderboard.
MELAC: Massive Evaluation of Large Language Models with Alignment of Culture in Persian Language
Farhan Farsi | Farnaz Aghababaloo | Shahriar Shariati Motlagh | Parsa Ghofrani | MohammadAli SadraeiJavaheri | Shayan Bali | Amir Hossein Shabani | Farbod Bijary | Ghazal Zamaninejad | AmirMohammad Salehoof | Saeedeh Momtazi
Proceedings of the 14th International Joint Conference on Natural Language Processing and the 4th Conference of the Asia-Pacific Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics
Farhan Farsi | Farnaz Aghababaloo | Shahriar Shariati Motlagh | Parsa Ghofrani | MohammadAli SadraeiJavaheri | Shayan Bali | Amir Hossein Shabani | Farbod Bijary | Ghazal Zamaninejad | AmirMohammad Salehoof | Saeedeh Momtazi
Proceedings of the 14th International Joint Conference on Natural Language Processing and the 4th Conference of the Asia-Pacific Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics
As large language models (LLMs) become increasingly embedded in our daily lives, evaluating their quality and reliability across diverse contexts has become essential. While comprehensive benchmarks exist for assessing LLM performance in English, there remains a significant gap in evaluation resources for other languages. Moreover, because most LLMs are trained primarily on data rooted in European and American cultures, they often lack familiarity with non-Western cultural contexts. To address this limitation, our study focuses on the Persian language and Iranian culture. We introduce 19 new evaluation datasets specifically designed to assess LLMs on topics such as Iranian law, Persian grammar, Persian idioms, and university entrance exams. Using these datasets, we benchmarked 41 prominent LLMs, aiming to bridge the existing cultural and linguistic evaluation gap in the field. The evaluation results are publicly available on our live leaderboard: https://huggingface.co/spaces/opll-org/Open-Persian-LLM-Leaderboard
2024
The Touché23-ValueEval Dataset for Identifying Human Values behind Arguments
Nailia Mirzakhmedova | Johannes Kiesel | Milad Alshomary | Maximilian Heinrich | Nicolas Handke | Xiaoni Cai | Valentin Barriere | Doratossadat Dastgheib | Omid Ghahroodi | Mohammad Ali Sadraei Javaheri | Ehsaneddin Asgari | Lea Kawaletz | Henning Wachsmuth | Benno Stein
Proceedings of the 2024 Joint International Conference on Computational Linguistics, Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC-COLING 2024)
Nailia Mirzakhmedova | Johannes Kiesel | Milad Alshomary | Maximilian Heinrich | Nicolas Handke | Xiaoni Cai | Valentin Barriere | Doratossadat Dastgheib | Omid Ghahroodi | Mohammad Ali Sadraei Javaheri | Ehsaneddin Asgari | Lea Kawaletz | Henning Wachsmuth | Benno Stein
Proceedings of the 2024 Joint International Conference on Computational Linguistics, Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC-COLING 2024)
While human values play a crucial role in making arguments persuasive, we currently lack the necessary extensive datasets to develop methods for analyzing the values underlying these arguments on a large scale. To address this gap, we present the Touché23-ValueEval dataset, an expansion of the Webis-ArgValues-22 dataset. We collected and annotated an additional 4780 new arguments, doubling the dataset’s size to 9324 arguments. These arguments were sourced from six diverse sources, covering religious texts, community discussions, free-text arguments, newspaper editorials, and political debates. Each argument is annotated by three crowdworkers for 54 human values, following the methodology established in the original dataset. The Touché23-ValueEval dataset was utilized in the SemEval 2023 Task 4. ValueEval: Identification of Human Values behind Arguments, where an ensemble of transformer models demonstrated state-of-the-art performance. Furthermore, our experiments show that a fine-tuned large language model, Llama-2-7B, achieves comparable results.
Transformers for Bridging Persian Dialects: Transliteration Model for Tajiki and Iranian Scripts
MohammadAli SadraeiJavaheri | Ehsaneddin Asgari | Hamid Reza Rabiee
Proceedings of the 2024 Joint International Conference on Computational Linguistics, Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC-COLING 2024)
MohammadAli SadraeiJavaheri | Ehsaneddin Asgari | Hamid Reza Rabiee
Proceedings of the 2024 Joint International Conference on Computational Linguistics, Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC-COLING 2024)
In this study, we address the linguistic challenges posed by Tajiki Persian, a distinct variant of the Persian language that utilizes the Cyrillic script due to historical “Russification”. This distinguishes it from other Persian dialects that adopt the Arabic script. Despite its profound linguistic and cultural significance, Tajiki Persian remains a low-resource language with scant digitized datasets for computational applications. To address this deficiency, we created a parallel corpus using Shahnameh, a seminal Persian epic poem. Employing optical character recognition, we extracted Tajiki Persian verses from primary sources and applied a heuristic method to align them with their Iranian Persian counterparts. We then trained and assessed transliteration models using two prominent sequence-to-sequence architectures: GRU with attention and transformer. Our results underscore the enhanced performance of our models, particularly in contrast to pre-trained large multilingual models like GPT-3.5, emphasizing the value of dedicated datasets in advancing computational approaches for underrepresented languages. With the publication of this work, we are disseminating, for the first time, a vast collection of Persian poetry spanning 1000 years, transcribed in Tajiki scripts for the benefit of the Tajiki-speaking communities. The dataset, along with the model’s code and checkpoints, is accessible at https://github.com/language-ml/Tajiki-Shahname, marking a significant contribution to computational linguistic resources for Tajiki Persian.
2023
Ebhaam at SemEval-2023 Task 1: A CLIP-Based Approach for Comparing Cross-modality and Unimodality in Visual Word Sense Disambiguation
Zeinab Taghavi | Parsa Haghighi Naeini | Mohammad Ali Sadraei | Soroush Gooran | Ehsaneddin Asgari | Hamid Reza Rabiee | Hossein Sameti
Proceedings of the 17th International Workshop on Semantic Evaluation (SemEval-2023)
Zeinab Taghavi | Parsa Haghighi Naeini | Mohammad Ali Sadraei | Soroush Gooran | Ehsaneddin Asgari | Hamid Reza Rabiee | Hossein Sameti
Proceedings of the 17th International Workshop on Semantic Evaluation (SemEval-2023)
This paper presents an approach to tackle the task of Visual Word Sense Disambiguation (Visual-WSD), which involves determining the most appropriate image to represent a given polysemous word in one of its particular senses. The proposed approach leverages the CLIP model, prompt engineering, and text-to-image models such as GLIDE and DALL-E 2 for both image retrieval and generation. To evaluate our approach, we participated in the SemEval 2023 shared task on “Visual Word Sense Disambiguation (Visual-WSD)” using a zero-shot learning setting, where we compared the accuracy of different combinations of tools, including “Simple prompt-based” methods and “Generated prompt-based” methods for prompt engineering using completion models, and text-to-image models for changing input modality from text to image. Moreover, we explored the benefits of cross-modality evaluation between text and candidate images using CLIP. Our experimental results demonstrate that the proposed approach reaches better results than cross-modality approaches, highlighting the potential of prompt engineering and text-to-image models to improve accuracy in Visual-WSD tasks. We assessed our approach in a zero-shot learning scenario and attained an accuracy of 68.75\% in our best attempt.
Sina at SemEval-2023 Task 4: A Class-Token Attention-based Model for Human Value Detection
Omid Ghahroodi | Mohammad Ali Sadraei | Doratossadat Dastgheib | Mahdieh Soleymani Baghshah | Mohammad Hossein Rohban | Hamid Rabiee | Ehsaneddin Asgari
Proceedings of the 17th International Workshop on Semantic Evaluation (SemEval-2023)
Omid Ghahroodi | Mohammad Ali Sadraei | Doratossadat Dastgheib | Mahdieh Soleymani Baghshah | Mohammad Hossein Rohban | Hamid Rabiee | Ehsaneddin Asgari
Proceedings of the 17th International Workshop on Semantic Evaluation (SemEval-2023)
The human values expressed in argumentative texts can provide valuable insights into the culture of a society. They can be helpful in various applications such as value-based profiling and ethical analysis. However, one of the first steps in achieving this goal is to detect the category of human value from an argument accurately. This task is challenging due to the lack of data and the need for philosophical inference. It also can be challenging for humans to classify arguments according to their underlying human values. This paper elaborates on our model for the SemEval 2023 Task 4 on human value detection. We propose a class-token attention-based model and evaluate it against baseline models, including finetuned BERT language model and a keyword-based approach.
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- Ehsaneddin Asgari 4
- Farnaz Aghababaloo 2
- Doratossadat Dastgheib 2
- Omid Ghahroodi 2
- Hamid Reza Rabiee 2
- Amirmohammad Salehoof 2
- Ghazal Zamaninejad 2
- Milad Alshomary 1
- Mahdieh Soleymani Baghshah 1
- Shayan Bali 1
- Valentin Barriere 1
- Farbod Bijary 1
- Xiaoni Cai 1
- Farhan Farsi 1
- Parsa Ghofrani 1
- Soroush Gooran 1
- Nicolas Handke 1
- Maximilian Heinrich 1
- Lea Kawaletz 1
- Johannes Kiesel 1
- Nailia Mirzakhmedova 1
- Saeedeh Momtazi 1
- Shahriar Shariati Motlagh 1
- Parsa Haghighi Naeini 1
- Milad Molazadeh Oskuee 1
- Hamid Rabiee 1
- Hamideh Rafiee 1
- Mohammad Hossein Rohban 1
- Hossein Sameti 1
- Amir Hossein Shabani 1
- Benno Stein 1
- Zeinab Taghavi 1
- Henning Wachsmuth 1