Nicolaas Jedema

CL
h-index52
5papers
44citations
Novelty50%
AI Score43

5 Papers

AISep 23, 2024
Speechworthy Instruction-tuned Language Models

Hyundong Cho, Nicolaas Jedema, Leonardo F. R. Ribeiro et al. · amazon-science

Current instruction-tuned language models are exclusively trained with textual preference data and thus are often not aligned with the unique requirements of other modalities, such as speech. To better align language models with the speech domain, we explore (i) prompting strategies grounded in radio-industry best practices and (ii) preference learning using a novel speech-based preference data of 20K samples, generated with a wide spectrum of prompts that induce varying dimensions of speech-suitability and labeled by annotators who listen to response pairs. Both human and automatic evaluation show that both prompting and preference learning increase the speech-suitability of popular instruction-tuned LLMs. Interestingly, we find that prompting and preference learning can be additive; combining them achieves the best win rates in head-to-head comparison, resulting in responses that are preferred or tied to the base model in 76.2% of comparisons on average. Lastly, we share lexical, syntactical, and qualitative analyses to showcase how each method contributes to improving the speech-suitability of generated responses.

76.1DBApr 9
Graph Query Generation with Constraint-guided Large Language Agents

Mengying Wang, Nicolaas Jedema, Rahul Pandey et al.

Knowledge Graph Question Answering (KGQA) has advanced through structured query generation, yet most efforts target RDF/SPARQL, leaving Cypher and property graphs underexplored, despite increasing demand for unified KGQA in industry settings. We propose UniQGen, a novel constraint-based framework that employs LLM agents to dynamically extract and refine representative graph query clauses into executable, intent-aligned graph queries across query languages. The foundation of our method is a variant of Chase & Backchase, a family of algorithms for query optimization and reformulation. We extend Chase & Backchase with a dynamic reasoning process over query constraints that also interact with LLMs for query quality estimation. With a Cypher-supported Freebase graph deployed on Amazon Neptune, we extensively evaluate our approach on popular KGQA benchmarks (GraphQ, GrailQA, and WebQSP). We demonstrate that UniQGen outperforms state-of-the-art graph query generation techniques in both accuracy and efficiency, with F1 gains of 31.6% on GraphQ and 4.9% on GrailQA. Unlike prior methods, our framework does not require fine-tuning for schema matching, making it more extensible to schema-less graphs and semantics in query workloads, and is more suitable for enterprise-grade KGQA. We release Cypher outputs and a Neptune-ready Freebase snapshot to support reproducible, cross-language KGQA research.

CLJan 26
Hierarchical Text Classification with LLM-Refined Taxonomies

Jonas Golde, Nicolaas Jedema, Ravi Krishnan et al.

Hierarchical text classification (HTC) depends on taxonomies that organize labels into structured hierarchies. However, many real-world taxonomies introduce ambiguities, such as identical leaf names under similar parent nodes, which prevent language models (LMs) from learning clear decision boundaries. In this paper, we present TaxMorph, a framework that uses large language models (LLMs) to transform entire taxonomies through operations such as renaming, merging, splitting, and reordering. Unlike prior work, our method revises the full hierarchy to better match the semantics encoded by LMs. Experiments across three HTC benchmarks show that LLM-refined taxonomies consistently outperform human-curated ones in various settings up to +2.9pp. in F1. To better understand these improvements, we compare how well LMs can assign leaf nodes to parent nodes and vice versa across human-curated and LLM-refined taxonomies. We find that human-curated taxonomies lead to more easily separable clusters in embedding space. However, the LLM-refined taxonomies align more closely with the model's actual confusion patterns during classification. In other words, even though they are harder to separate, they better reflect the model's inductive biases. These findings suggest that LLM-guided refinement creates taxonomies that are more compatible with how models learn, improving HTC performance.

CLFeb 13, 2025
Tuning-Free Personalized Alignment via Trial-Error-Explain In-Context Learning

Hyundong Cho, Karishma Sharma, Nicolaas Jedema et al. · amazon-science

Language models are aligned to the collective voice of many, resulting in generic outputs that do not align with specific users' styles. In this work, we present Trial-Error-Explain In-Context Learning (TICL), a tuning-free method that personalizes language models for text generation tasks with fewer than 10 examples per user. TICL iteratively expands an in-context learning prompt via a trial-error-explain process, adding model-generated negative samples and explanations that provide fine-grained guidance towards a specific user's style. TICL achieves favorable win rates on pairwise comparisons with LLM-as-a-judge up to 91.5% against the previous state-of-the-art and outperforms competitive tuning-free baselines for personalized alignment tasks of writing emails, essays and news articles. Both lexical and qualitative analyses show that the negative samples and explanations enable language models to learn stylistic context more effectively and overcome the bias towards structural and formal phrases observed in their zero-shot outputs. By front-loading inference compute to create a user-specific in-context learning prompt that does not require extra generation steps at test time, TICL presents a novel yet simple approach for personalized alignment.

CLDec 13, 2024
Familiarity: Better Evaluation of Zero-Shot Named Entity Recognition by Quantifying Label Shifts in Synthetic Training Data

Jonas Golde, Patrick Haller, Max Ploner et al.

Zero-shot named entity recognition (NER) is the task of detecting named entities of specific types (such as 'Person' or 'Medicine') without any training examples. Current research increasingly relies on large synthetic datasets, automatically generated to cover tens of thousands of distinct entity types, to train zero-shot NER models. However, in this paper, we find that these synthetic datasets often contain entity types that are semantically highly similar to (or even the same as) those in standard evaluation benchmarks. Because of this overlap, we argue that reported F1 scores for zero-shot NER overestimate the true capabilities of these approaches. Further, we argue that current evaluation setups provide an incomplete picture of zero-shot abilities since they do not quantify the label shift (i.e., the similarity of labels) between training and evaluation datasets. To address these issues, we propose Familiarity, a novel metric that captures both the semantic similarity between entity types in training and evaluation, as well as their frequency in the training data, to provide an estimate of label shift. It allows researchers to contextualize reported zero-shot NER scores when using custom synthetic training datasets. Further, it enables researchers to generate evaluation setups of various transfer difficulties for fine-grained analysis of zero-shot NER.