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Zuhair HasanShaik
Fixing paper assignments
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Mental health disorders are a global crisis. While various datasets exist for detecting such disorders, there remains a critical gap in identifying individuals actively seeking help. This paper introduces a novel dataset, M-Help, specifically designed to detect help-seeking behavior on social media. The dataset goes beyond traditional labels by identifying not only help-seeking activity but also specific mental health disorders and their underlying causes, such as relationship challenges or financial stressors. AI models trained on M-Help can address three key tasks: identifying help-seekers, diagnosing mental health conditions, and uncovering the root causes of issues.
Hateful online content is a growing concern, especially for young people. While social media platforms aim to connect us, they can also become breeding grounds for negativity and harmful language. This study tackles this issue by proposing a novel framework called HOLD-Z, specifically designed to detect hate and offensive comments in Telugu-English code-mixed social media content. HOLD-Z leverages a combination of approaches, including three powerful models: LSTM architecture, Zypher, and openchat_3.5. The study highlights the effectiveness of prompt engineering and Quantized Low-Rank Adaptation (QLoRA) in boosting performance. Notably, HOLD-Z secured the 9th place in the prestigious HOLD-Telugu DravidianLangTech@EACL-2024 shared task, showcasing its potential for tackling the complexities of hate and offensive comment classification.
Integrating speech and text capabilities into large language models (LLMs) is a challenging task and we present Large Rank Adaptation (LaRA) for effective cross-modal integration of speech and text in the LLM framework. Unlike conventional LoRA, our method requires significantly larger ranks comparable to the pretrained weights to accommodate the complexities of speech-text cross-modality learning. The approach utilizes HuBERT to convert speech into discrete tokens and fine-tunes the pretrained LLM to adapt to cross-modal inputs and outputs. The work employs a Hi-Fi GAN vocoder to synthesize speech waveforms from the generated speech units. The initial studies use the Librispeech corpus to teach the model the relationships between speech and text, and Daily Talk, which involves dialog conversations, to adapt for interaction. The proposed work demonstrates adaptation for spoken and text conversations. However, the proposed framework can be easily extended to other cross-modal applications.
This paper reports on an innovative approach to Emotion Recognition in Conversation and Emotion Flip Reasoning for the SemEval-2024 competition with a specific focus on analyzing Hindi-English code-mixed language. By integrating Large Language Models (LLMs) with Instruction-based Fine-tuning and Quantized Low-Rank Adaptation (QLoRA), this study introduces innovative techniques like Sentext-height and advanced prompting strategies to navigate the intricacies of emotional analysis in code-mixed conversational data. The results of the proposed work effectively demonstrate its ability to overcome label bias and the complexities of code-mixed languages. Our team achieved ranks of 5, 3, and 3 in tasks 1, 2, and 3 respectively. This study contributes valuable insights and methods for enhancing emotion recognition models, underscoring the importance of continuous research in this field.