Amin Dada


2024

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Comprehensive Study on German Language Models for Clinical and Biomedical Text Understanding
Ahmad Idrissi-Yaghir | Amin Dada | Henning Schäfer | Kamyar Arzideh | Giulia Baldini | Jan Trienes | Max Hasin | Jeanette Bewersdorff | Cynthia S. Schmidt | Marie Bauer | Kaleb E. Smith | Jiang Bian | Yonghui Wu | Jörg Schlötterer | Torsten Zesch | Peter A. Horn | Christin Seifert | Felix Nensa | Jens Kleesiek | Christoph M. Friedrich
Proceedings of the 2024 Joint International Conference on Computational Linguistics, Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC-COLING 2024)

Recent advances in natural language processing (NLP) can be largely attributed to the advent of pre-trained language models such as BERT and RoBERTa. While these models demonstrate remarkable performance on general datasets, they can struggle in specialized domains such as medicine, where unique domain-specific terminologies, domain-specific abbreviations, and varying document structures are common. This paper explores strategies for adapting these models to domain-specific requirements, primarily through continuous pre-training on domain-specific data. We pre-trained several German medical language models on 2.4B tokens derived from translated public English medical data and 3B tokens of German clinical data. The resulting models were evaluated on various German downstream tasks, including named entity recognition (NER), multi-label classification, and extractive question answering. Our results suggest that models augmented by clinical and translation-based pre-training typically outperform general domain models in medical contexts. We conclude that continuous pre-training has demonstrated the ability to match or even exceed the performance of clinical models trained from scratch. Furthermore, pre-training on clinical data or leveraging translated texts have proven to be reliable methods for domain adaptation in medical NLP tasks.

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IKIM at MEDIQA-M3G 2024: Multilingual Visual Question-Answering for Dermatology through VLM Fine-tuning and LLM Translations
Marie Bauer | Constantin Seibold | Jens Kleesiek | Amin Dada
Proceedings of the 6th Clinical Natural Language Processing Workshop

This paper presents our solution to the MEDIQA-M3G Challenge at NAACL-ClinicalNLP 2024. We participated in all three languages, ranking first in Chinese and Spanish and third in English. Our approach utilizes LLaVA-med, an open-source, medical vision-language model (VLM) for visual question-answering in Chinese, and Mixtral-8x7B-instruct, a Large Language Model (LLM) for a subsequent translation into English and Spanish. In addition to our final method, we experiment with alternative approaches: Training three different models for each language instead of translating the results from one model, using different combinations and numbers of input images, and additional training on publicly available data that was not part of the original challenge training set.

2023

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On the Impact of Cross-Domain Data on German Language Models
Amin Dada | Aokun Chen | Cheng Peng | Kaleb Smith | Ahmad Idrissi-Yaghir | Constantin Seibold | Jianning Li | Lars Heiliger | Christoph Friedrich | Daniel Truhn | Jan Egger | Jiang Bian | Jens Kleesiek | Yonghui Wu
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: EMNLP 2023

Traditionally, large language models have been either trained on general web crawls or domain-specific data. However, recent successes of generative large language models, have shed light on the benefits of cross-domain datasets. To examine the significance of prioritizing data diversity over quality, we present a German dataset comprising texts from five domains, along with another dataset aimed at containing high-quality data. Through training a series of models ranging between 122M and 750M parameters on both datasets, we conduct a comprehensive benchmark on multiple downstream tasks. Our findings demonstrate that the models trained on the cross-domain dataset outperform those trained on quality data alone, leading to improvements up to 4.45% over the previous state-of-the-art.