Amir Reza Jafari

2papers

2 Papers

16.4CVMay 11
Med-StepBench: A Hierarchical Reasoning Framework for Evaluating Hallucinations in Medical Vision-Language Models

Minh Khoi Nguyen, Dai Lam Le, Amir Reza Jafari et al.

Large vision-language models (VLMs) demonstrate strong performance in medical image understanding, but frequently generate clinically plausible yet incorrect statements, raising significant safety concerns. Existing medical hallucination benchmarks primarily focus on 2D imaging with one-shot diagnostic questions, offering limited insight into whether predictions are grounded in correct localization and abnormality identification, allowing critical reasoning errors to remain hidden behind seemingly correct diagnoses. We introduce Med-StepBench, the first large-scale benchmark for step-wise hallucination detection in 3D oncological PET/CT, comprising over 12,000 images and more than 1,000,000 image-statement pairs across volumetric and multi-view 2D data, which decomposes clinical reasoning into four expert-designed diagnostic stages. Using clinician-verified annotations, we perform the first step-level evaluation of general-purpose and medical VLMs, revealing systematic failure modes obscured by aggregate accuracy metrics. Furthermore, we show that current VLMs are highly susceptible to adversarial yet clinically plausible intermediate explanations, which significantly amplify hallucinations despite contradictory visual evidence. Together, our findings highlight fundamental limitations in grounding multi-step clinical reasoning and establish Med-StepBench as a rigorous benchmark for developing safer and more reliable medical VLMs.

CLAug 28, 2021
Transfer Learning for Multi-lingual Tasks -- a Survey

Amir Reza Jafari, Behnam Heidary, Reza Farahbakhsh et al.

These days different platforms such as social media provide their clients from different backgrounds and languages the possibility to connect and exchange information. It is not surprising anymore to see comments from different languages in posts published by international celebrities or data providers. In this era, understanding cross languages content and multilingualism in natural language processing (NLP) are hot topics, and multiple efforts have tried to leverage existing technologies in NLP to tackle this challenging research problem. In this survey, we provide a comprehensive overview of the existing literature with a focus on transfer learning techniques in multilingual tasks. We also identify potential opportunities for further research in this domain.