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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tonja, Atnafu Lambebo, Anand, Srija, Villa-Cueva, Emilio, Azime, Israel Abebe, Alabi, Jesujoba Oluwadara, Mohamed, Muhidin A., Yadeta, Debela Desalegn, Abadi, Negasi Haile, Oppong, Abigail, Obiefuna, Nnaemeka Casmir, Abdulmumin, Idris, Etori, Naome A, Wairagala, Eric Peter, Tshinu, Kanda Patrick, Emmanuel, Imanigirimbabazi, Malema, Gabofetswe, Aji, Alham Fikri, Adelani, David Ifeoluwa, Solorio, Thamar
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.05699
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Table of Contents:
  • Africa is home to over one-third of the world's languages, yet remains underrepresented in AI research. We introduce Afri-MCQA, the first Multilingual Cultural Question-Answering benchmark covering 7.5k Q&A pairs across 15 African languages from 12 countries. The benchmark offers parallel English-African language Q&A pairs across text and speech modalities and was entirely created by native speakers. Benchmarking large language models (LLMs) on Afri-MCQA shows that open-weight models perform poorly across evaluated cultures, with near-zero accuracy on open-ended VQA when queried in native language or speech. To evaluate linguistic competence, we include control experiments meant to assess this specific aspect separate from cultural knowledge, and we observe significant performance gaps between native languages and English for both text and speech. These findings underscore the need for speech-first approaches, culturally grounded pretraining, and cross-lingual cultural transfer. To support more inclusive multimodal AI development in African languages, we release our Afri-MCQA under academic license or CC BY-NC 4.0 on HuggingFace (https://huggingface.co/datasets/Atnafu/Afri-MCQA)