Ribin Chalumattu


2024

pdf bib
AdaptEval: Evaluating Large Language Models on Domain Adaptation for Text Summarization
Anum Afzal | Ribin Chalumattu | Florian Matthes | Laura Mascarell
Proceedings of the 1st Workshop on Customizable NLP: Progress and Challenges in Customizing NLP for a Domain, Application, Group, or Individual (CustomNLP4U)

Despite the advances in the abstractive summarization task using Large Language Models (LLM), there is a lack of research that asses their abilities to easily adapt to different domains. We evaluate the domain adaptation abilities of a wide range of LLMs on the summarization task across various domains in both fine-tuning and in-context learning settings. We also present AdaptEval, the first domain adaptation evaluation suite. AdaptEval includes a domain benchmark and a set of metrics to facilitate the analysis of domain adaptation. Our results demonstrate that LLMs exhibit comparable performance in the in-context learning setting, regardless of their parameter scale.

pdf bib
German Also Hallucinates! Inconsistency Detection in News Summaries with the Absinth Dataset
Laura Mascarell | Ribin Chalumattu | Annette Rios
Proceedings of the 2024 Joint International Conference on Computational Linguistics, Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC-COLING 2024)

The advent of Large Language Models (LLMs) has led to remarkable progress on a wide range of natural language processing tasks. Despite the advances, these large-sized models still suffer from hallucinating information in their output, which poses a major issue in automatic text summarization, as we must guarantee that the generated summary is consistent with the content of the source document. Previous research addresses the challenging task of detecting hallucinations in the output (i.e. inconsistency detection) in order to evaluate the faithfulness of the generated summaries. However, these works primarily focus on English and recent multilingual approaches lack German data. This work presents Absinth, a manually annotated dataset for hallucination detection in German news summarization and explores the capabilities of novel open-source LLMs on this task in both fine-tuning and in-context learning settings. We open-source and release the Absinth dataset to foster further research on hallucination detection in German.

2023

pdf bib
Entropy-based Sampling for Abstractive Multi-document Summarization in Low-resource Settings
Laura Mascarell | Ribin Chalumattu | Julien Heitmann
Proceedings of the 16th International Natural Language Generation Conference

Research in Multi-document Summarization (MDS) mostly focuses on the English language and depends on large MDS datasets that are not available for other languages. Some of these approaches concatenate the source documents, resulting in overlong model inputs. Existing transformer architectures are unable to process such long inputs entirely, omitting documents in the summarization process. Other solutions address this issue by implementing multi-stage approaches that also require changes in the model architecture. In this paper, we introduce various sampling approaches based on information entropy that allow us to perform MDS in a single stage. These approaches also consider all source documents without using MDS training data nor changing the model’s architecture. Besides, we build a MDS test set of German news articles to assess the performance of our methods on abstractive multi-document summaries. Experimental results show that our entropy-based approaches outperform previous state-of-the-art on German MDS, while still remaining primarily abstractive. We release our code and MDS test set to encourage further research in German abstractive MDS.