X-ALMA: Plug & Play Modules and Adaptive Rejection for Quality Translation at Scale
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2410.03115v1
- Date: Fri, 4 Oct 2024 03:17:27 GMT
- Title: X-ALMA: Plug & Play Modules and Adaptive Rejection for Quality Translation at Scale
- Authors: Haoran Xu, Kenton Murray, Philipp Koehn, Hieu Hoang, Akiko Eriguchi, Huda Khayrallah,
- Abstract summary: Large language models (LLMs) have achieved remarkable success across various NLP tasks, yet their focus has predominantly been on English.
In this paper, we prioritize quality over scaling number of languages, with a focus on multilingual machine translation task.
X-ALMA is a model designed with a commitment to ensuring top-tier performance across 50 diverse languages, regardless of their resource levels.
- Score: 25.257770733168012
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: Large language models (LLMs) have achieved remarkable success across various NLP tasks, yet their focus has predominantly been on English due to English-centric pre-training and limited multilingual data. While some multilingual LLMs claim to support for hundreds of languages, models often fail to provide high-quality response for mid- and low-resource languages, leading to imbalanced performance heavily skewed in favor of high-resource languages like English and Chinese. In this paper, we prioritize quality over scaling number of languages, with a focus on multilingual machine translation task, and introduce X-ALMA, a model designed with a commitment to ensuring top-tier performance across 50 diverse languages, regardless of their resource levels. X-ALMA surpasses state-of-the-art open-source multilingual LLMs, such as Aya-101 and Aya-23, in every single translation direction on the FLORES and WMT'23 test datasets according to COMET-22. This is achieved by plug-and-play language-specific module architecture to prevent language conflicts during training and a carefully designed training regimen with novel optimization methods to maximize the translation performance. At the final stage of training regimen, our proposed Adaptive Rejection Preference Optimization (ARPO) surpasses existing preference optimization methods in translation tasks.
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