Fully Clickable Video Ad

Cohere claims its new Aya Vision AI model is best-in-class | TechCrunch

Spread the love


Cohere for AI, AI startup Cohere’s nonprofit research lab, this week released a multimodal “open” AI model, Aya Vision, the lab claimed is best-in-class.

Aya Vision can perform tasks like writing image captions, answering questions about photos, translating text, and generating summaries in 23 major languages. Cohere, which is also making Aya Vision available for free through WhatsApp, called it “a significant step towards making technical breakthroughs accessible to researchers worldwide.”

“While AI has made significant progress, there is still a big gap in how well models perform across different languages — one that becomes even more noticeable in multimodal tasks that involve both text and images,” Cohere wrote in a blog post. “Aya Vision aims to explicitly help close that gap.”

Aya Vision comes in a couple of flavors: Aya Vision 32B and Aya Vision 8B. The more sophisticated of the two, Aya Vision 32B, sets a “new frontier,” Cohere said, outperforming models 2x its size including Meta’s Llama-3.2 90B Vision on certain visual understanding benchmarks. Meanwhile, Aya Vision 8B scores better on some evaluations than models 10x its size, according to Cohere.

Blinking Photo Ad

Both models are available from AI dev platform Hugging Face under a Creative Commons 4.0 license with Cohere’s acceptable use addendum. They can’t be used for commercial applications.

Cohere said that Aya Vision was trained using a “diverse pool” of English datasets, which the lab translated and used to create synthetic annotations. Annotations, also known as tags or labels, help models understand and interpret data during the training process. For example, annotation to train an image recognition model might take the form of markings around objects or captions referring to each person, place, or object depicted in an image.

See also  The best mouse in 2025
Cohere’s Aya Vision model can perform a range of visual understanding tasks.Image Credits:Cohere

Cohere’s use of synthetic annotations — that is, annotations generated by AI — is on trend. Despite its potential downsides, rivals including OpenAI are increasingly leveraging synthetic data to train models as the well of real-world data dries up. Research firm Gartner estimates that 60% of the data used for AI and an­a­lyt­ics projects last year was syn­thet­i­cally created.

According to Cohere, training Aya Vision on synthetic annotations enabled the lab to use fewer resources while achieving competitive performance.

“This showcases our critical focus on efficiency and [doing] more using less compute,” Cohere wrote in its blog. “This also enables greater support for the research community, who often have more limited access to compute resources.”

Together with Aya Vision, Cohere also released a new benchmark suite, AyaVisionBench, designed to probe a model’s skills in “vision-language” tasks like identifying differences between two images and converting screenshots to code.

The AI industry is in the midst of what some have called an “evaluation crisis,” a consequence of the popularization of benchmarks that give aggregate scores that correlate poorly to proficiency on tasks most AI users care about. Cohere asserts that AyaVisionBench is a step toward rectifying this, providing a “broad and challenging” framework for assessing a model’s cross-lingual and multimodal understanding.

With any luck, that’s indeed the case.

“[T]he dataset serves as a robust benchmark for evaluating vision-language models in multilingual and real-world settings,” Cohere researchers wrote in a post on Hugging Face. “We make this evaluation set available to the research community to push forward multilingual multimodal evaluations.”

See also  Amazon deal of the day: Grab the Ember Mug 2 while it's down to its best price ever
Related Posts
Kiren Rijiju: Why Earth Sciences minister Rijiju is upset with this European IT company | – Times of India

Earth Sciences Minister Kiren Rijiju is reportedly upset with the French IT company Atos. Reason is said to be Read more

Former Activision boss reportedly wants to buy TikTok – Times of India
Former Activision boss reportedly wants to buy TikTok - Times of India

Bobby Kotick, the former head of Activision Blizzard, is reportedly considering buying TikTok, as the app could be banned Read more

How Apple’s Find My app ‘cost’ a US city millions of dollars – Times of India
How Apple’s Find My app ‘cost’ a US city millions of dollars - Times of India

Apple's Find My app has cost the city of Denver, US $3.76 million in compensation and damages. In 2022, Read more

Moto G54 receives a price cut in India: Here’s how much the smartphone costs – Times of India
Moto G54 receives a price cut in India: Here’s how much the smartphone costs - Times of India

If you have been planing to purchase a budget smartphone, then you can consider buying the Moto G54. Launched Read more

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top