Maciej Chrabaszcz


2025

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PLLuM-Align: Polish Preference Dataset for Large Language Model Alignment
Karolina Seweryn | Anna Kołos | Agnieszka Karlińska | Katarzyna Lorenc | Katarzyna Dziewulska | Maciej Chrabaszcz | Aleksandra Krasnodebska | Paula Betscher | Zofia Cieślińska | Katarzyna Kowol | Julia Moska | Dawid Motyka | Paweł Walkowiak | Bartosz Żuk | Arkadiusz Janz
Proceedings of the 2025 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing

Alignment is the critical process of minimizing harmful outputs by teaching large language models (LLMs) to prefer safe, helpful and appropriate responses. While the majority of alignment research and datasets remain overwhelmingly English-centric, ensuring safety across diverse linguistic and cultural contexts requires localized resources. In this paper, we introduce the first Polish preference dataset PLLuM-Align, created entirely through human annotation to reflect Polish language and cultural nuances. The dataset includes response rating, ranking, and multi-turn dialog data. Designed to reflect the linguistic subtleties and cultural norms of Polish, this resource lays the groundwork for more aligned Polish LLMs and contributes to the broader goal of multilingual alignment in underrepresented languages.

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Rainbow-Teaming for the Polish Language: A Reproducibility Study
Aleksandra Krasnodębska | Maciej Chrabaszcz | Wojciech Kusa
Proceedings of the 5th Workshop on Trustworthy NLP (TrustNLP 2025)

The development of multilingual large language models (LLMs) presents challenges in evaluating their safety across all supported languages. Enhancing safety in one language (e.g., English) may inadvertently introduce vulnerabilities in others. To address this issue, we implement a methodology for the automatic creation of red-teaming datasets for safety evaluation in Polish language. Our approach generates both harmful and non-harmful prompts by sampling different risk categories and attack styles. We test several open-source models, including those trained on Polish data, and evaluate them using metrics such as Attack Success Rate (ASR) and False Reject Rate (FRR). The results reveal clear gaps in safety performance between models and show that better testing across languages is needed.