A Preliminary Study of Multilingual Code Language Models for Code Generation Task Using Translated Benchmarks

November 23, 2024 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› 2024 39th IEEE/ACM International Conference on Automated Software Engineering Workshops (ASEW)

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Authors Rohit Dandamudi, Gema RodrΓ­guez-PΓ©rez arXiv ID 2411.15470 Category cs.SE: Software Engineering Cross-listed cs.AI, cs.PL Citations 1 Venue 2024 39th IEEE/ACM International Conference on Automated Software Engineering Workshops (ASEW) Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Evaluating the performance of Code Language Models (CLMs) for software engineering tasks, especially in multilingual and low-resource programming language settings, poses significant challenges. These challenges are primarily due to the lack of high-quality benchmarks across various programming languages and the imbalanced nature of the CLMs training corpus. Although recent advances in one of the common downstream tasks, code generation, have shown promise by introducing translated benchmarks using different methodologies, there is a current lack of empirical evidence assessing these benchmarks. To address this gap, we conducted a preliminary study to evaluate the performance of Poly-Coder, a pioneering open-source, multilingual CLM built for code generation. We utilized two existing state-of-the-art translations of the popular code generation benchmark, HumanEval, facilitated by the OctoPack and MultiPL-E studies. Our results suggest that the outcomes observed in these translated benchmarks align well with evaluation metrics used during the training phase, such as perplexity, thereby validating their effectiveness in estimating the performance of CLMs. However, we identified several inconsistencies in the CLMs' performance across the translated benchmarks and encountered challenges in replicating the results. These initial insights highlight the need for more comprehensive empirical studies to fully understand translated benchmarks' methodological approaches, limitations, and reproducibility. Such studies are essential to ensure their reliability before they are widely adopted.
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