From e1753d8ca27c851ffc3da53e39e1371813f579fe Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Keiko Sakuma <58160927+sakumakeiko@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Tue, 29 Oct 2024 14:20:36 +0900 Subject: [PATCH] Update 2024-10-29-post1.md --- _posts/en/2024-10-29-post1.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/_posts/en/2024-10-29-post1.md b/_posts/en/2024-10-29-post1.md index 8c7030b5..b119bc5b 100644 --- a/_posts/en/2024-10-29-post1.md +++ b/_posts/en/2024-10-29-post1.md @@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ category: en Joint Support-Center for Data Science Research (ROIS-DS)
10-3 Midori-cho, Tachikawa, Tokyo 190-0014, Japan [Access](https://ds.rois.ac.jp/en_accesslink/en_ds/) -### OVERVIEW +### Overview BLAH (Biomedical Linked Annotation Hackathon) represents a series of annual hackathon events, specifically designed to foster open collaboration. The goal is to achieve a breakthrough in the sharing and linking of various resources for biomedical literature annotation and mining. By enhancing the interoperability of these resources, the initiative aims to substantially increase both the productivity and the impact within the community.
Within the scope of BLAH, the term "resources" encompasses a wide range of elements including corpora, annotation datasets, databases, language models, software tools, web services, terminologies, ontologies, graphical representations, movies, and more. The aspiration of BLAH is to create connections between all these resources, allowing them to interoperate seamlessly. We believe this integration will foster a more cohesive and effective environment for all stakeholders.
The 9th edition of BLAH (BLAH9) will be held under the special theme "Ensuring Robustness in LLM-based Research: Reproducibility, Interoperability, and Reliable Evaluation." Reproducibility and reliable evaluation are key to ensure that research remains robust and trustworthy. However, with the recent surge in research using large language models (LLMs), these important principles have become largely unclear. Interoperability, a vital component for fostering robust collaboration and promoting open science, has similarly faced challenges as LLM-based research expands. Now, two years into the surge of LLM-based research, it is an opportune moment to reassess and prioritize these critical aspects of research and development to ensure long-term sustainability and rigor in the field.