MIMO: Multilingual Information Retrieval via Monolingual Objectives
About
Multilingual Information Retrieval (MLIR) reflects real-world search environments in which queries and relevant documents may appear in different languages within a mixed-language corpus. However, existing embedding models are primarily optimized for Multi-Monolingual retrieval and their performance often degrades in MLIR settings. Moreover, directly applying conventional contrastive learning to MLIR can exacerbate language clustering and expose a trade-off between cross-lingual alignment and embedding uniformity. To address these limitations, we propose MIMO: Multilingual Information Retrieval via Monolingual Objectives, a two-stage framework that uses a stable English semantic space from a high-performing teacher model as an anchor. MIMO first initializes the student model's cross-lingual alignment through knowledge distillation, and then jointly optimizes distillation and cross-lingual contrastive learning to improve retrieval discrimination while preserving alignment. Extensive experiments show that MIMO consistently outperforms existing cross-lingual training baselines across various MLIR and Multi-Monolingual benchmarks. MIMO also remains competitive with off-the-shelf models of similar or larger parameter scales. Furthermore, our cross-lingual Alignment-Uniformity analysis clarifies the distinct roles of the two loss components and shows that their combination yields a favorable trade-off between alignment and uniformity.
Related benchmarks
| Task | Dataset | Result | Rank | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Multilingual Information Retrieval | MLIR Benchmarks zero-shot | Belebele Score84.18 | 8 |