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Prompting Multilingual Large Language Models to Generate Code-Mixed Texts: The Case of South East Asian Languages

23 March 2023
Zheng-Xin Yong
Ruochen Zhang
Jessica Zosa Forde
Skyler Wang
Arjun Subramonian
Holy Lovenia
Samuel Cahyawijaya
Genta Indra Winata
Lintang Sutawika
Jan Christian Blaise Cruz
Yinghua Tan
Long Phan
Rowena Garcia
Thamar Solorio
Alham Fikri Aji
    LRM
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Abstract

While code-mixing is a common linguistic practice in many parts of the world, collecting high-quality and low-cost code-mixed data remains a challenge for natural language processing (NLP) research. The recent proliferation of Large Language Models (LLMs) compels one to ask: how capable are these systems in generating code-mixed data? In this paper, we explore prompting multilingual LLMs in a zero-shot manner to generate code-mixed data for seven languages in South East Asia (SEA), namely Indonesian, Malay, Chinese, Tagalog, Vietnamese, Tamil, and Singlish. We find that publicly available multilingual instruction-tuned models such as BLOOMZ and Flan-T5-XXL are incapable of producing texts with phrases or clauses from different languages. ChatGPT exhibits inconsistent capabilities in generating code-mixed texts, wherein its performance varies depending on the prompt template and language pairing. For instance, ChatGPT generates fluent and natural Singlish texts (an English-based creole spoken in Singapore), but for English-Tamil language pair, the system mostly produces grammatically incorrect or semantically meaningless utterances. Furthermore, it may erroneously introduce languages not specified in the prompt. Based on our investigation, existing multilingual LLMs exhibit a wide range of proficiency in code-mixed data generation for SEA languages. As such, we advise against using LLMs in this context without extensive human checks.

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