Jinkyung Jo


2025

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The BiGGen Bench: A Principled Benchmark for Fine-grained Evaluation of Language Models with Language Models
Seungone Kim | Juyoung Suk | Ji Yong Cho | Shayne Longpre | Chaeeun Kim | Dongkeun Yoon | Guijin Son | Yejin Cho | Sheikh Shafayat | Jinheon Baek | Sue Hyun Park | Hyeonbin Hwang | Jinkyung Jo | Hyowon Cho | Haebin Shin | Seongyun Lee | Hanseok Oh | Noah Lee | Namgyu Ho | Se June Joo | Miyoung Ko | Yoonjoo Lee | Hyungjoo Chae | Jamin Shin | Joel Jang | Seonghyeon Ye | Bill Yuchen Lin | Sean Welleck | Graham Neubig | Moontae Lee | Kyungjae Lee | Minjoon Seo
Proceedings of the 2025 Conference of the Nations of the Americas Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technologies (Volume 1: Long Papers)

As language models (LMs) become capable of handling a wide range of tasks, their evaluation is becoming as challenging as their development. Most generation benchmarks currently assess LMs using abstract evaluation criteria-like helpfulness and harmlessness-which often lack the flexibility and granularity of human assessment. Additionally, these benchmarks tend to focus disproportionately on specific capabilities such as instruction following, leading to coverage bias. To overcome these limitations, we introduce the BiGGen Bench, a principled generation benchmark designed to thoroughly evaluate nine distinct capabilities of LMs across 77 diverse tasks. A key feature of the BiGGen Bench is its use of instance-specific evaluation criteria, closely mirroring the nuanced discernment of human evaluation. We apply this benchmark to assess 100 frontier LMs using five evaluator LMs. Our code, data, and evaluation results are all publicly available at https://github.com/prometheus-eval/prometheus-eval.

2023

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An Integrated Search System for Korea Weather Data
Jinkyung Jo | Dayeon Ki | Soyoung Yoon | Minjoon Seo
Proceedings of the 2023 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing: Industry Track

We introduce WeatherSearch, an integrated search system deployed at the Korea Meteorological Administration (KMA). WeatherSearch enables users to retrieve all the relevant data for weather forecasting from a massive weather database with simple natural language queries. We carefully design and conduct multiple expert surveys and interviews for template creation and apply data augmentation techniques including template filling to collect 4 million data points with minimal human labors. We then finetune mT5 on the collected dataset and achieve an average MRR of 0.66 and an average Recall of 0.82. We also discuss weather-data-specific characteristics that should be taken into account for creating such a system. We hope our paper serves as a simple and effective guideline for those designing similar systems in other regions of the world.