Tereza Vrabcová
Also published as: Tereza Vrabcova
2025
Towards the Roots of the Negation Problem: A Multilingual NLI Dataset and Model Scaling Analysis
Tereza Vrabcová
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Marek Kadlčík
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Petr Sojka
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Michal Štefánik
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Michal Spiegel
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: EMNLP 2025
Negations are key to determining sentence meaning, making them essential for logical reasoning. Despite their importance, negations pose a substantial challenge for large language models (LLMs) and remain underexplored.We constructed and published two new textual entailment datasets NoFEVER-ML and NoSNLI-ML in four languages (English, Czech, German, and Ukrainian) with paired examples differing in negation. It allows investigation of the root causes of the negation problem and its exemplification: how popular LLM model properties and language impact their inability to handle negation correctly.Contrary to previous work, we show that increasing the model size may improve the models’ ability to handle negations. Furthermore, we find that both the models’ reasoning accuracy and robustness to negation are language-dependent and that the length and explicitness of the premise have an impact on robustness. We observe higher accuracy in languages with relatively fixed word order like English, compared to those with greater flexibility like Czech and German.Our entailment datasets pave the way to further research for explanation and exemplification of the negation problem, minimization of LLM hallucinations, and improvement of LLM reasoning in multilingual settings.
2023
People and Places of Historical Europe: Bootstrapping Annotation Pipeline and a New Corpus of Named Entities in Late Medieval Texts
Vit Novotny
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Kristina Luger
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Michal Štefánik
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Tereza Vrabcova
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Ales Horak
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: ACL 2023
Although pre-trained named entity recognition (NER) models are highly accurate on modern corpora, they underperform on historical texts due to differences in language OCR errors. In this work, we develop a new NER corpus of 3.6M sentences from late medieval charters written mainly in Czech, Latin, and German.We show that we can start with a list of known historical figures and locations and an unannotated corpus of historical texts, and use information retrieval techniques to automatically bootstrap a NER-annotated corpus. Using our corpus, we train a NER model that achieves entity-level Precision of 72.81–93.98% with 58.14–81.77% Recall on a manually-annotated test dataset. Furthermore, we show that using a weighted loss function helps to combat class imbalance in token classification tasks. To make it easy for others to reproduce and build upon our work, we publicly release our corpus, models, and experimental code.
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- Michal Štefánik 2
 - Aleš Horák 1
 - Marek Kadlčík 1
 - Kristina Luger 1
 - Vít Novotný 1
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