Patrick Schramowski


2023

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Distilling Adversarial Prompts from Safety Benchmarks: Report for the Adversarial Nibbler Challenge
Manuel Brack | Patrick Schramowski | Kristian Kersting
Proceedings of the ART of Safety: Workshop on Adversarial testing and Red-Teaming for generative AI

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Speaking Multiple Languages Affects the Moral Bias of Language Models
Katharina Haemmerl | Bjoern Deiseroth | Patrick Schramowski | Jindřich Libovický | Constantin Rothkopf | Alexander Fraser | Kristian Kersting
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: ACL 2023

Pre-trained multilingual language models (PMLMs) are commonly used when dealing with data from multiple languages and cross-lingual transfer. However, PMLMs are trained on varying amounts of data for each language. In practice this means their performance is often much better on English than many other languages. We explore to what extent this also applies to moral norms. Do the models capture moral norms from English and impose them on other languages? Do the models exhibit random and thus potentially harmful beliefs in certain languages? Both these issues could negatively impact cross-lingual transfer and potentially lead to harmful outcomes. In this paper, we (1) apply the MORALDIRECTION framework to multilingual models, comparing results in German, Czech, Arabic, Chinese, and English, (2) analyse model behaviour on filtered parallel subtitles corpora, and (3) apply the models to a Moral Foundations Questionnaire, comparing with human responses from different countries. Our experiments demonstrate that, indeed, PMLMs encode differing moral biases, but these do not necessarily correspond to cultural differences or commonalities in human opinions. We release our code and models.