Rochana Prih Hastuti

CL
h-index42
4papers
32citations
Novelty35%
AI Score43

4 Papers

CVMar 10, 2025Code
Crowdsource, Crawl, or Generate? Creating SEA-VL, a Multicultural Vision-Language Dataset for Southeast Asia

Samuel Cahyawijaya, Holy Lovenia, Joel Ruben Antony Moniz et al. · cambridge

Southeast Asia (SEA) is a region of extraordinary linguistic and cultural diversity, yet it remains significantly underrepresented in vision-language (VL) research. This often results in artificial intelligence (AI) models that fail to capture SEA cultural nuances. To fill this gap, we present SEA-VL, an open-source initiative dedicated to developing high-quality, culturally relevant data for SEA languages. By involving contributors from SEA countries, SEA-VL aims to ensure better cultural relevance and diversity, fostering greater inclusivity of underrepresented languages in VL research. Beyond crowdsourcing, our initiative goes one step further in the exploration of the automatic collection of culturally relevant images through crawling and image generation. First, we find that image crawling achieves approximately ~85% cultural relevance while being more cost- and time-efficient than crowdsourcing. Second, despite the substantial progress in generative vision models, synthetic images remain unreliable in accurately reflecting SEA cultures. The generated images often fail to reflect the nuanced traditions and cultural contexts of the region. Collectively, we gather 1.28M SEA culturally-relevant images, more than 50 times larger than other existing datasets. Through SEA-VL, we aim to bridge the representation gap in SEA, fostering the development of more inclusive AI systems that authentically represent diverse cultures across SEA.

CLSep 9, 2025
Factuality Beyond Coherence: Evaluating LLM Watermarking Methods for Medical Texts

Rochana Prih Hastuti, Rian Adam Rajagede, Mansour Al Ghanim et al.

As large language models (LLMs) are adapted to sensitive domains such as medicine, their fluency raises safety risks, particularly regarding provenance and accountability. Watermarking embeds detectable patterns to mitigate these risks, yet its reliability in medical contexts remains untested. Existing benchmarks focus on detection-quality tradeoffs and overlook factual risks. In medical text, watermarking often reweights low-entropy tokens, which are highly predictable and often carry critical medical terminology. Shifting these tokens can cause inaccuracy and hallucinations, risks that prior general-domain benchmarks fail to capture. We propose a medical-focused evaluation workflow that jointly assesses factual accuracy and coherence. Using GPT-Judger and further human validation, we introduce the Factuality-Weighted Score (FWS), a composite metric prioritizing factual accuracy beyond coherence to guide watermarking deployment in medical domains. Our evaluation shows current watermarking methods substantially compromise medical factuality, with entropy shifts degrading medical entity representation. These findings underscore the need for domain-aware watermarking approaches that preserve the integrity of medical content.

CLFeb 23, 2025
Evaluating the Robustness and Accuracy of Text Watermarking Under Real-World Cross-Lingual Manipulations

Mansour Al Ghanim, Jiaqi Xue, Rochana Prih Hastuti et al.

We present a study to benchmark representative watermarking methods in cross-lingual settings. The current literature mainly focuses on the evaluation of watermarking methods for the English language. However, the literature for evaluating watermarking in cross-lingual settings is scarce. This results in overlooking important adversary scenarios in which a cross-lingual adversary could be in, leading to a gray area of practicality over cross-lingual watermarking. In this paper, we evaluate four watermarking methods in four different and vocabulary rich languages. Our experiments investigate the quality of text under different watermarking procedure and the detectability of watermarks with practical translation attack scenarios. Specifically, we investigate practical scenarios that an adversary with cross-lingual knowledge could take, and evaluate whether current watermarking methods are suitable for such scenarios. Finally, from our findings, we draw key insights about watermarking in cross-lingual settings.

CLOct 21, 2020
Stacking Neural Network Models for Automatic Short Answer Scoring

Rian Adam Rajagede, Rochana Prih Hastuti

Automatic short answer scoring is one of the text classification problems to assess students' answers during exams automatically. Several challenges can arise in making an automatic short answer scoring system, one of which is the quantity and quality of the data. The data labeling process is not easy because it requires a human annotator who is an expert in their field. Further, the data imbalance process is also a challenge because the number of labels for correct answers is always much less than the wrong answers. In this paper, we propose the use of a stacking model based on neural network and XGBoost for classification process with sentence embedding feature. We also propose to use data upsampling method to handle imbalance classes and hyperparameters optimization algorithm to find a robust model automatically. We use Ukara 1.0 Challenge dataset and our best model obtained an F1-score of 0.821 exceeding the previous work at the same dataset.