Summary of the paper

Title Measuring Interlanguage: Native Language Identification with L1-influence Metrics
Authors Julian Brooke and Graeme Hirst
Abstract The task of native language (L1) identification suffers from a relative paucity of useful training corpora, and standard within-corpus evaluation is often problematic due to topic bias. In this paper, we introduce a method for L1 identification in second language (L2) texts that relies only on much more plentiful L1 data, rather than the L2 texts that are traditionally used for training. In particular, we do word-by-word translation of large L1 blog corpora to create a mapping to L2 forms that are a possible result of language transfer, and then use that information for unsupervised classification. We show this method is effective in several different learner corpora, with bigram features being particularly useful.
Topics Document Classification, Text categorisation, Multilinguality, Language modelling
Full paper Measuring Interlanguage: Native Language Identification with L1-influence Metrics
Bibtex @InProceedings{BROOKE12.129,
  author = {Julian Brooke and Graeme Hirst},
  title = {Measuring Interlanguage: Native Language Identification with L1-influence Metrics},
  booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eight International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC'12)},
  year = {2012},
  month = {may},
  date = {23-25},
  address = {Istanbul, Turkey},
  editor = {Nicoletta Calzolari (Conference Chair) and Khalid Choukri and Thierry Declerck and Mehmet Uğur Doğan and Bente Maegaard and Joseph Mariani and Asuncion Moreno and Jan Odijk and Stelios Piperidis},
  publisher = {European Language Resources Association (ELRA)},
  isbn = {978-2-9517408-7-7},
  language = {english}
 }
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