VIDA: A dataset for Visually Dependent Ambiguity in Multimodal Machine Translation

Abstract

Ambiguity resolution is a key challenge in multimodal machine translation (MMT), where models must genuinely leverage visual input to map an ambiguous expression to its intended meaning. Although prior work has proposed disambiguation-oriented benchmarks probing the role of vision, we observe that existing benchmarks remain limited by task-format mismatch, narrow ambiguity coverage, or insufficient visual-dependency validation. Moreover, existing ambiguity evaluations are not well suited to diverse ambiguity types in open-ended translation. To address these limitations, we present VIDA (Visually-Dependent Ambiguity), a dataset of 2,500 carefully curated instances in which resolving an annotated source span requires visual evidence. We further propose Disambiguation-Centric Metrics that use an LLM-as-a-judge classifier to verify whether annotated ambiguous expressions are resolved correctly at the span level. Experiments with two state-of-the-art LVLMs show that supervised fine-tuning (SFT) improves overall translation quality, while chain-of-thought SFT (CoT-SFT) yields stronger out-of-distribution disambiguation, suggesting that explicit disambiguation guidance improves generalization to diverse ambiguity types.

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