Silin Gao
2026
Apertus: Democratizing Open and Compliant LLMs for Global Language Environments
Alejandro Hern\'andez-Cano | Alexander H\"agele | Allen Hao Huang | Angelika Romanou | Antoni-Joan Solergibert | Barna P\'asztor | Bettina Messmer | Dhia Garbaya | Eduard Frank \v{D}urech | Ido Hakimi | Juan Garcia Giraldo | Mete Ismayilzada | Negar Foroutan | Skander Moalla | Tiancheng Chen | Vinko Sabol\v{c}ec | Yixuan Xu | Michael Aerni | Badr AlKhamissi | In\'es Altemir Marinas | Mohammad Hossein Amani | Matin Ansaripour | Ilia Badanin | Harold Benoit | Emanuela Boros | Nicholas John Browning | Fabian B\"osch | Maximilian B\"other | Niklas Canova | Camille Challier | Cl\'ement Charmillot | Jonathan Coles | Jan Milan Deriu | Arnout Devos | Lukas Drescher | Daniil Dzenhaliou | Maud Ehrmann | Dongyang Fan | Simin Fan | Silin Gao | Miguel Gila | Mar{\'\i}a Grandury | Diba Hashemi | Alexander Miserlis Hoyle | Jiaming Jiang | Mark Klein | Andrei Kucharavy | Anastasiia Kucherenko | Frederike L\"ubeck | Roman Machacek | Theofilos Ioannis Manitaras | Andreas Marfurt | Kyle Matoba | Simon Matrenok | Henrique Mendon\c{c}a | Fawzi Roberto Mohamed | Syrielle Montariol | Luca Mouchel | Sven Najem-Meyer | Jingwei Ni | Gennaro Oliva | Matteo Pagliardini | Elia Palme | Andrei Panferov | L\'eo Paoletti | Marco Passerini | Ivan Pavlov | Auguste Poiroux | Kaustubh Ponkshe | Nathan Ranchin | Javier Rando | Mathieu Sauser | Jakhongir Saydaliev | Mukhammadali Sayfiddinov | Marian Schneider | Stefano Schuppli | Marco Scialanga | Andrei Semenov | Kumar Shridhar | Raghav Singhal | Anna Sotnikova | Alexander Sternfeld | Ayush Kumar Tarun | Paul Teiletche | Jannis Vamvas | Xiaozhe Yao | Hao Zhao | Alexander Ilic | Ana Klimovic | Andreas Krause | Caglar Gulcehre | David Rosenthal | Elliott Ash | Florian Tram\`er | Joost VandeVondele | Livio Veraldi | Martin Rajman | Thomas C. Schulthess | Torsten Hoefler | Antoine Bosselut | Martin Jaggi | Imanol Schlag
Proceedings of the 64th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)
Alejandro Hern\'andez-Cano | Alexander H\"agele | Allen Hao Huang | Angelika Romanou | Antoni-Joan Solergibert | Barna P\'asztor | Bettina Messmer | Dhia Garbaya | Eduard Frank \v{D}urech | Ido Hakimi | Juan Garcia Giraldo | Mete Ismayilzada | Negar Foroutan | Skander Moalla | Tiancheng Chen | Vinko Sabol\v{c}ec | Yixuan Xu | Michael Aerni | Badr AlKhamissi | In\'es Altemir Marinas | Mohammad Hossein Amani | Matin Ansaripour | Ilia Badanin | Harold Benoit | Emanuela Boros | Nicholas John Browning | Fabian B\"osch | Maximilian B\"other | Niklas Canova | Camille Challier | Cl\'ement Charmillot | Jonathan Coles | Jan Milan Deriu | Arnout Devos | Lukas Drescher | Daniil Dzenhaliou | Maud Ehrmann | Dongyang Fan | Simin Fan | Silin Gao | Miguel Gila | Mar{\'\i}a Grandury | Diba Hashemi | Alexander Miserlis Hoyle | Jiaming Jiang | Mark Klein | Andrei Kucharavy | Anastasiia Kucherenko | Frederike L\"ubeck | Roman Machacek | Theofilos Ioannis Manitaras | Andreas Marfurt | Kyle Matoba | Simon Matrenok | Henrique Mendon\c{c}a | Fawzi Roberto Mohamed | Syrielle Montariol | Luca Mouchel | Sven Najem-Meyer | Jingwei Ni | Gennaro Oliva | Matteo Pagliardini | Elia Palme | Andrei Panferov | L\'eo Paoletti | Marco Passerini | Ivan Pavlov | Auguste Poiroux | Kaustubh Ponkshe | Nathan Ranchin | Javier Rando | Mathieu Sauser | Jakhongir Saydaliev | Mukhammadali Sayfiddinov | Marian Schneider | Stefano Schuppli | Marco Scialanga | Andrei Semenov | Kumar Shridhar | Raghav Singhal | Anna Sotnikova | Alexander Sternfeld | Ayush Kumar Tarun | Paul Teiletche | Jannis Vamvas | Xiaozhe Yao | Hao Zhao | Alexander Ilic | Ana Klimovic | Andreas Krause | Caglar Gulcehre | David Rosenthal | Elliott Ash | Florian Tram\`er | Joost VandeVondele | Livio Veraldi | Martin Rajman | Thomas C. Schulthess | Torsten Hoefler | Antoine Bosselut | Martin Jaggi | Imanol Schlag
Proceedings of the 64th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)
Open LLMs enable AI practitioners to control development costs by building on an existing foundation for downstream applications. While offering substantial promise, current models often fail to meet the needs of users needing open solutions aligned with responsible AI principles, including data compliance, transparency, and inclusivity. In this work, we present Apertus, a fully open suite of large language models (LLMs) designed to address responsibility shortcomings in today’s open model ecosystem, namely data responsibility and global representation. Unlike many prior models that release weights without reproducible data pipelines or regard for content-owner rights, Apertus models are pretrained exclusively on openly available data, retroactively respecting robots.txt exclusions and filtering for non-permissive, toxic, and personally identifiable content. To mitigate risks of data memorization, we also adopt the Goldfish objective during pretraining, strongly suppressing verbatim recall of data while retaining downstream task performance. Apertus also drastically expands multilingual coverage, training on 15T tokens from over approximately 1800 languages, with about 40% of pretraining data allocated to non-English content. Released at 8B and 70B scales, Apertus approaches state-of-the-art results among fully open models on multilingual benchmarks, rivaling or surpassing open-weight counterparts.
2025
Efficient Tool Use with Chain-of-Abstraction Reasoning
Silin Gao | Jane Dwivedi-Yu | Ping Yu | Xiaoqing Ellen Tan | Ramakanth Pasunuru | Olga Golovneva | Koustuv Sinha | Asli Celikyilmaz | Antoine Bosselut | Tianlu Wang
Proceedings of the 31st International Conference on Computational Linguistics
Silin Gao | Jane Dwivedi-Yu | Ping Yu | Xiaoqing Ellen Tan | Ramakanth Pasunuru | Olga Golovneva | Koustuv Sinha | Asli Celikyilmaz | Antoine Bosselut | Tianlu Wang
Proceedings of the 31st International Conference on Computational Linguistics
To achieve faithful reasoning that aligns with human expectations, large language models (LLMs) need to ground their reasoning to real-world knowledge (e.g., web facts, math and physical rules). Tools help LLMs access this external knowledge, but there remains challenges for fine-tuning LLM agents (e.g., Toolformer) to invoke tools in multi-step reasoning problems, where inter-connected tool calls require holistic and efficient tool usage planning. In this work, we propose a new method for LLMs to better leverage tools in multi-step reasoning. Our method, Chain-of-Abstraction (CoA), trains LLMs to first decode reasoning chains with abstract placeholders, and then call domain tools to reify each reasoning chain by filling in specific knowledge. This planning with abstract chains enables LLMs to learn more general reasoning strategies, which are robust to shifts of domain knowledge (e.g., math results) relevant to different reasoning questions. It also allows LLMs to perform decoding and calling of external tools in parallel, which avoids the inference delay caused by waiting for tool responses. In mathematical reasoning and Wiki QA domains, we show that our method consistently outperforms previous chain-of-thought and tool-augmented baselines on both in-distribution and out-of-distribution test sets, with an average ~6% absolute QA accuracy improvement. LLM agents trained with our method also show more efficient tool use, with inference speed being on average ~1.4x faster than baseline tool-augmented LLMs.
Proceedings of the 3rd Workshop on Towards Knowledgeable Foundation Models (KnowFM)
Yuji Zhang | Canyu Chen | Sha Li | Mor Geva | Chi Han | Xiaozhi Wang | Shangbin Feng | Silin Gao | Isabelle Augenstein | Mohit Bansal | Manling Li | Heng Ji
Proceedings of the 3rd Workshop on Towards Knowledgeable Foundation Models (KnowFM)
Yuji Zhang | Canyu Chen | Sha Li | Mor Geva | Chi Han | Xiaozhi Wang | Shangbin Feng | Silin Gao | Isabelle Augenstein | Mohit Bansal | Manling Li | Heng Ji
Proceedings of the 3rd Workshop on Towards Knowledgeable Foundation Models (KnowFM)
2024
DiffuCOMET: Contextual Commonsense Knowledge Diffusion
Silin Gao | Mete Ismayilzada | Mengjie Zhao | Hiromi Wakaki | Yuki Mitsufuji | Antoine Bosselut
Proceedings of the 62nd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)
Silin Gao | Mete Ismayilzada | Mengjie Zhao | Hiromi Wakaki | Yuki Mitsufuji | Antoine Bosselut
Proceedings of the 62nd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)
Inferring contextually-relevant and diverse commonsense to understand narratives remains challenging for knowledge models. In this work, we develop a series of knowledge models, DiffuCOMET, that leverage diffusion to learn to reconstruct the implicit semantic connections between narrative contexts and relevant commonsense knowledge. Across multiple diffusion steps, our method progressively refines a representation of commonsense facts that is anchored to a narrative, producing contextually-relevant and diverse commonsense inferences for an input context. To evaluate DiffuCOMET, we introduce new metrics for commonsense inference that more closely measure knowledge diversity and contextual relevance. Our results on two different benchmarks, ComFact and WebNLG+, show that knowledge generated by DiffuCOMET achieves a better trade-off between commonsense diversity, contextual relevance and alignment to known gold references, compared to baseline knowledge models.
2023
PeaCoK: Persona Commonsense Knowledge for Consistent and Engaging Narratives
Silin Gao | Beatriz Borges | Soyoung Oh | Deniz Bayazit | Saya Kanno | Hiromi Wakaki | Yuki Mitsufuji | Antoine Bosselut
Proceedings of the 61st Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)
Silin Gao | Beatriz Borges | Soyoung Oh | Deniz Bayazit | Saya Kanno | Hiromi Wakaki | Yuki Mitsufuji | Antoine Bosselut
Proceedings of the 61st Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)
Sustaining coherent and engaging narratives requires dialogue or storytelling agents to understandhow the personas of speakers or listeners ground the narrative. Specifically, these agents must infer personas of their listeners to produce statements that cater to their interests. They must also learn to maintain consistent speaker personas for themselves throughout the narrative, so that their counterparts feel involved in a realistic conversation or story. However, personas are diverse and complex: they entail large quantities of rich interconnected world knowledge that is challenging to robustly represent in general narrative systems (e.g., a singer is good at singing, and may have attended conservatoire). In this work, we construct a new large-scale persona commonsense knowledge graph, PeaCoK, containing ~100K human-validated persona facts. Our knowledge graph schematizes five dimensions of persona knowledge identified in previous studies of human interactive behaviours, and distils facts in this schema from both existing commonsense knowledge graphs and large-scale pretrained language models. Our analysis indicates that PeaCoK contains rich and precise world persona inferences that help downstream systems generate more consistent and engaging narratives.
2022
ComFact: A Benchmark for Linking Contextual Commonsense Knowledge
Silin Gao | Jena D. Hwang | Saya Kanno | Hiromi Wakaki | Yuki Mitsufuji | Antoine Bosselut
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: EMNLP 2022
Silin Gao | Jena D. Hwang | Saya Kanno | Hiromi Wakaki | Yuki Mitsufuji | Antoine Bosselut
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: EMNLP 2022
Understanding rich narratives, such as dialogues and stories, often requires natural language processing systems to access relevant knowledge from commonsense knowledge graphs. However, these systems typically retrieve facts from KGs using simple heuristics that disregard the complex challenges of identifying situationally-relevant commonsense knowledge (e.g., contextualization, implicitness, ambiguity).In this work, we propose the new task of commonsense fact linking, where models are given contexts and trained to identify situationally-relevant commonsense knowledge from KGs. Our novel benchmark, ComFact, contains ~293k in-context relevance annotations for commonsense triplets across four stylistically diverse dialogue and storytelling datasets. Experimental results confirm that heuristic fact linking approaches are imprecise knowledge extractors. Learned fact linking models demonstrate across-the-board performance improvements (~34.6% F1) over these heuristics. Furthermore, improved knowledge retrieval yielded average downstream improvements of 9.8% for a dialogue response generation task. However, fact linking models still significantly underperform humans, suggesting our benchmark is a promising testbed for research in commonsense augmentation of NLP systems.
2021
HyKnow: End-to-End Task-Oriented Dialog Modeling with Hybrid Knowledge Management
Silin Gao | Ryuichi Takanobu | Wei Peng | Qun Liu | Minlie Huang
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: ACL-IJCNLP 2021
Silin Gao | Ryuichi Takanobu | Wei Peng | Qun Liu | Minlie Huang
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: ACL-IJCNLP 2021
2020
Paraphrase Augmented Task-Oriented Dialog Generation
Silin Gao | Yichi Zhang | Zhijian Ou | Zhou Yu
Proceedings of the 58th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics
Silin Gao | Yichi Zhang | Zhijian Ou | Zhou Yu
Proceedings of the 58th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics
Neural generative models have achieved promising performance on dialog generation tasks if given a huge data set. However, the lack of high-quality dialog data and the expensive data annotation process greatly limit their application in real world settings. We propose a paraphrase augmented response generation (PARG) framework that jointly trains a paraphrase model and a response generation model to improve the dialog generation performance. We also design a method to automatically construct paraphrase training data set based on dialog state and dialog act labels. PARG is applicable to various dialog generation models, such as TSCP (Lei et al., 2018) and DAMD (Zhang et al., 2019). Experimental results show that the proposed framework improves these state-of-the-art dialog models further on CamRest676 and MultiWOZ. PARG also outperforms other data augmentation methods significantly in dialog generation tasks, especially under low resource settings.
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- Antoine Bosselut 5
- Yuki Mitsufuji 3
- Hiromi Wakaki 3
- Mete Ismayilzada 2
- Saya Kanno 2
- Michael Aerni 1
- Badr AlKhamissi 1
- Mohammad Hossein Amani 1
- Matin Ansaripour 1
- Elliott Ash 1
- Isabelle Augenstein 1
- Fabian B\"osch 1
- Maximilian B\"other 1
- Ilia Badanin 1
- Mohit Bansal 1
- Deniz Bayazit 1
- Harold Benoit 1
- Beatriz Borges 1
- Emanuela Boroş 1
- Nicholas John Browning 1
- Niklas Canova 1
- Asli Celikyilmaz 1
- Camille Challier 1
- Cl\'ement Charmillot 1
- Tiancheng Chen 1
- Canyu Chen 1
- Jonathan Coles 1
- Jan Milan Deriu 1
- Arnout Devos 1
- Lukas Drescher 1
- Jane Dwivedi-Yu 1
- Daniil Dzenhaliou 1
- Maud Ehrmann 1
- Dongyang Fan 1
- Simin Fan 1
- Shangbin Feng 1
- Negar Foroutan 1
- Dhia Garbaya 1
- Mor Geva 1
- Miguel Gila 1
- Juan Garcia Giraldo 1
- Olga Golovneva 1
- María Grandury 1
- Çağlar Gu̇lçehre 1
- Alexander H\"agele 1
- Ido Hakimi 1
- Chi Han 1
- Diba Hashemi 1
- Alejandro Hern\'andez-Cano 1
- Torsten Hoefler 1
- Alexander Miserlis Hoyle 1
- Allen Hao Huang 1
- Minlie Huang 1
- Jena D. Hwang 1
- Alexander Ilic 1
- Martin Jaggi 1
- Heng Ji 1
- Jiaming Jiang 1
- Mark Klein 1
- Ana Klimovic 1
- Andreas Krause 1
- Andrei Kucharavy 1
- Anastasiia Kucherenko 1
- Frederike L\"ubeck 1
- Sha Li 1
- Manling Li 1
- Qun Liu 1
- Roman Machacek 1
- Theofilos Ioannis Manitaras 1
- Andreas Marfurt 1
- In\'es Altemir Marinas 1
- Kyle Matoba 1
- Simon Matrenok 1
- Henrique Mendon\c{c}a 1
- Bettina Messmer 1
- Skander Moalla 1
- Fawzi Roberto Mohamed 1
- Syrielle Montariol 1
- Luca Mouchel 1
- Sven Najem-Meyer 1
- Jingwei Ni 1
- Soyoung Oh 1
- Gennaro Oliva 1
- Zhijian Ou 1
- Barna P\'asztor 1
- Matteo Pagliardini 1
- Elia Palme 1
- Andrei Panferov 1
- L\'eo Paoletti 1
- Marco Passerini 1
- Ramakanth Pasunuru 1
- Ivan Pavlov 1
- Wei Peng 1
- Auguste Poiroux 1
- Kaustubh Ponkshe 1
- Martin Rajman 1
- Nathan Ranchin 1
- Javier Rando 1
- Angelika Romanou 1
- David Rosenthal 1
- Vinko Sabol\v{c}ec 1
- Mathieu Sauser 1
- Jakhongir Saydaliev 1
- Mukhammadali Sayfiddinov 1
- Imanol Schlag 1
- Marian Schneider 1
- Thomas C. Schulthess 1
- Stefano Schuppli 1
- Marco Scialanga 1
- Andrei Semenov 1
- Kumar Shridhar 1
- Raghav Singhal 1
- Koustuv Sinha 1
- Antoni-Joan Solergibert 1
- Anna Sotnikova 1
- Alexander Sternfeld 1
- Ryuichi Takanobu 1
- Xiaoqing Ellen Tan 1
- Ayush Kumar Tarun 1
- Paul Teiletche 1
- Florian Tram\`er 1
- Jannis Vamvas 1
- Joost VandeVondele 1
- Livio Veraldi 1
- Xiaozhi Wang 1
- Tianlu Wang 1
- Yixuan Xu 1
- Xiaozhe Yao 1
- Ping Yu 1
- Zhou Yu 1
- Yuji Zhang 1
- Yichi Zhang 1
- Hao Zhao 1
- Mengjie Zhao 1
- Eduard Frank \v{D}urech 1