
SCBX to put Thai research on global stage
This goal is a key mechanism for boosting Thai researchers' capabilities and broadening their international influence.
A-Star research refers to international conferences ranked by CORE, which classifies conferences within four tiers -- A*, A, B and C.
Recently, the Typhoon research team of SCB 10X, the disruptive technology investment arm within SCBX Group, achieved a major milestone with the acceptance of five co-authored artificial-intelligence papers by the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL) 2025, one of the world's most prestigious conferences in natural-language processing and computational linguistics.
The success stems from collaboration with four leading institutions: VISTEC, Stanford University, the University of Cambridge, and the SEACrowd research community. It comprises three papers in the main conference, one in the findings, and one in the conference's Large Language Model (LLM) Security Workshop.
Kaweewut Temphuwapat, chief executive of SCB 10X, said the company was "deeply honoured" that all five of Typhoon's co-authored papers were accepted by ACL 2025, with a rigorous peer-review process and high international recognition.
The three papers in the category of main conference are "Skill Aggregation: Reference-free LLM-Dependent Aggregation" (authored in collaboration with the University of Cambridge and Stanford University), "Mind the Gap! Static and Interactive Evaluations of Large Audio Models" (in collaboration with Stanford University), and "Crowdsource, Crawl, or Generate? Creating SEA-VL, a Multicultural Vision-Language Dataset for Southeast Asia" (in collaboration with SEACrowd).
The paper in the findings category is "Towards Better Understanding of Program-of-Thought Reasoning in Cross-Lingual and Multilingual Environments" (in collaboration with VISTEC).
The paper in the LLM Security Workshop category is "Shortcut Learning in Safety: The Impact of Keyword Bias in Safeguards" (in collaboration with VISTEC).
Mr Kaweewut said that SCB 10X is one of Thailand's leading organisations pursuing A*-quality research, with 11 AI papers accepted and published at top-tier international conferences such as ACL, the Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing Conference, the International Conference on Learning Representations, and Interspeech.
Research insights from these papers were the foundation for SCB 10X's Typhoon T1, Typhoon2 R1, and Typhoon2 Audio AI models.
"In addition, SCB 10X has published several technical reports on the approaches behind our models on OpenTyphoon.ai, enabling researchers worldwide to access and build upon this knowledge freely."
Although each paper has a specific focus, they all share a common goal: developing AI that is context-aware, inclusive and pragmatic, Mr Kaweewut said.
"We thank our collaborators, co-authors, and reviewers for making this possible," he added.
Although Thailand does not yet have an official national ranking for A* conference participation, signs of growth are emerging, with organisations such as SCBX Group, VISTEC, and Chulalongkorn University actively laying the groundwork for Thai researchers to gain global visibility and enhance the nation's reputation through world-class research.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Bangkok Post
2 days ago
- Bangkok Post
Private sector highlights business support measures
The Federation of Thai Industries (FTI) has presented recommendations to the commerce minister aimed at pushing the economy forward amid global trade uncertainties. During a meeting on Thursday, the Commerce Ministry's executive team led by Commerce Minister Jatuporn Buruspat and Deputy Commerce Minister Chantawit Tantasith discussed proposals presented by the FTI and chairman Kriengkrai Thiennukul. The meeting explored collaborative strategies between the government and the private sector to stimulate economic growth and address the rapidly changing trade situation, such as US tariffs, the European Union's carbon border adjustment mechanism, geopolitical tensions, rising production costs and the impacts of climate change. Mr Jatuporn said the ministry and the FTI are planning to issue a joint declaration on cooperation to systematically address challenges faced by businesses, with progress reviewed every 10 days. He said most of the FTI's proposals align with the ministry's urgent policies and will be implemented to help revive Thailand's economy. The focus is on grassroots economic development, leveraging soft power and expanding opportunities for all sectors, said Mr Jatuporn. Mr Kriengkrai outlined five economic and business support measures, including advocating for relief measures to support businesses affected by US tariffs, such as government assistance for legal and expert aid for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and reductions in related business costs such as certificate of origin fees. The private sector called on the government to accelerate tariff negotiations with the US, particularly regarding Section 232, which imposes high duties on key products such as steel, aluminium, vehicles and auto parts. The FTI recommended the government take proactive measures to mitigate trade diversion effects by initiating trade remedy actions rather than waiting for complaints from the private sector. All trade tools should be fully utilised, including anti-dumping, safeguards and countervailing duties, while monitoring unusual import surges under the Export and Import of Goods Act. The federation urged the government to explore new markets for Thai industries by expediting negotiations for new free trade agreements, such as the Thailand–Eurasian Economic Union agreement, supporting the SME proactive programme and trade missions, and increasing government procurement of made-in-Thailand products. Lastly, the FTI promoted the establishment of a long-term border trade ecosystem, calling for integrated infrastructure development and streamlined procedures to support comprehensive and sustainable border trade facilitation.

Bangkok Post
2 days ago
- Bangkok Post
Aid efforts aim to ease the burden
The Finance Ministry has issued measures to alleviate the economic impact on communities along the Thai-Cambodian border by implementing debt suspensions, interest rate reductions, and low-interest loan measures for affected individuals. According to Finance Minister Pichai Chunhavajira, the unrest stemming from clashes between security forces along the Thai-Cambodian border has affected the safety of local residents and disturbed the economy and social fabric of communities. The incidents have caused property damage and disrupted the livelihoods, occupations, and businesses of the people in the area, he said. In response, the ministry directed state financial institutions to offer various measures to alleviate the impact. For example, Government Savings Bank is to offer a suspension on principal repayments and partial interest payments, along with low-interest loans to small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) at a monthly interest rate of 0.75%, with a repayment term of 60 months. For SMEs, loans of up to 5 million baht per borrower are available, with a first-year interest rate matching the minimum loan rate (MLR) minus 2.65%, followed by the MLR for the remainder of the seven-year loan term. Meanwhile, the Bank for Agriculture and Agricultural Cooperatives plans to provide emergency loans for consumer expenses, up to 50,000 baht per borrower at the minimum retail rate for a loan term of up to three years. The first six months are interest-free. According to Mr Pichai, the SME Development Bank of Thailand is to offer a fixed interest rate of 3% a year for three years, with a maximum loan term of 10 years. The Export-Import Bank of Thailand plans to extend debt repayment periods up to 365 days, reduce interest rates by up to 20% of the original rate, and provide a temporary credit line increase of up to 30% of the original limit for one year, with a starting interest rate of 2.99% a year. In addition, the Comptroller-General's Department increased the emergency spending authority for provincial governors along the Cambodian border to 100 million baht in four provinces -- Surin, Si Sa Ket, Buri Ram and Ubon Ratchathani -- to support relief efforts for people affected by border-related issues. Governors are usually authorised to spend no more than 20 million baht under emergency provisions. In a separate development, Suwannee Jatsadasak, assistant governor of the Bank of Thailand's financial institutions policy group, said the central bank is monitoring how financial institutions are supporting both their employees and customers during the disputes. Thai financial institutions with branches in Cambodia have gradually repatriated their Thai staff, with all expected to return to Thailand as of yesterday. Some bank branches in Thai border provinces, specifically Surin, Si Sa Ket, Ubon Ratchathani, Buri Ram, Sa Kaeo, Trat and Chanthaburi, have been temporarily closed. On Thursday, the Thai Bankers' Association announced its member banks are temporarily closing their branches along the Thai-Cambodian border to ensure the safety of customers and the public, citing unrest in the area that has resulted in loss of life, property damage, and disruption to local livelihoods.

Bangkok Post
2 days ago
- Bangkok Post
Chinese arrivals to dip below 5m
Despite flight subsidies and incentive group stimulus, the number of Chinese tourist arrivals this year is expected to plunge below 5 million, significantly lower than the 6.7 million recorded last year, according to the Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT). Pattaraanong Na Chiangmai, deputy governor of international marketing for Asia and South Pacific at TAT, said the government's stimulus package worth 750 million baht should help drive Chinese arrivals to 5 million. She said travel agents have started to submit plans to operate chartered flights, which should start in August. "We're examining both tour prices and itineraries to ensure they are high-quality," said Ms Pattaraanong. Chuwit Sirivejkul, executive director of the East Asia region at TAT, said the agency is working directly with the provincial governments in China to promote tourism between the two countries. "Chinese tourists want sincerity from the Thai government, not a boast that all places are safe. They love Thailand, but they want to be warned or recommended about activities or incidents," said Mr Chuwit. Lertchai Wangtrakuldee, director of the Shanghai office, said all five TAT offices in China are less reliant on social media influencers and are pivoting to user-generated content about Thailand, encouraging tourists to submit their content to the TAT in exchange for gifts supported by tourism operators. Mr Lertchai said the decline of the Chinese market this year can be attributed to more intense competition from Japan, Malaysia and Vietnam, which have invested heavily in an effort to attract Chinese tourists. Vietnamese packages sold to the Chinese only cost 999 yuan (4,522 baht) in recent months, he said. As of July 20, Thailand has recorded more than 2.53 million Chinese tourists. The best-case scenario for this market in 2026 is 6.9 million, noted the TAT. The agency said daily Chinese arrivals only tally 15,000, while their average spending is 52,000 baht per trip. Mr Lertchai said room remains to attract tour groups from six regions under the TAT's Shanghai office, including Anhui, Shandong and Jiangsu, areas where tour groups accounted for 90%, 40% and 35% of total arrivals, respectively. This trend is similar to other regions, such as Hainan and Jiangxi in southern China, and Liaoning and Shanxi in northern China, which all have tour groups as a major segment. According to Dragon Trail International, 31% of Chinese travellers used travel agents or tour guides to find tourism information. Many large agents use live-streaming to sell packages, said Mr Lertchai. Ruedee Cheawsamoot, director of TAT's Kunming office, said the agency is tapping niche markets that are willing to spend, such as seniors. The agency is also planning to host a dance competition and a party in Thailand, which are their favourite activities. In addition, the TAT is promoting Thailand via campaigns targeting Chinese university students learning the Thai language in Yunnan and nearby provinces.