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LREC 2014main

A Multi-Dialect, Multi-Genre Corpus of Informal Written Arabic

Proceedings of the Ninth International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC 2014)

DOI:10.63317/3bqwpphzpx6n

Abstract

This paper presents a multi-dialect, multi-genre, human annotated corpus of dialectal Arabic. We collected utterances in five Arabic dialects: Levantine, Gulf, Egyptian, Iraqi and Maghrebi. We scraped newspaper websites for user commentary and Twitter for two distinct types of dialectal content. To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this work is the most diverse corpus of dialectal Arabic in both the source of the content and the number of dialects. Every utterance in the corpus was human annotated on Amazon’s Mechanical Turk; this stands in contrast to Al-Sabbagh and Girju (2012) where only a small subset was human annotated in order to train a classifier to automatically annotate the remainder of the corpus. We provide a discussion of the methodology used for the annotation in addition to the performance of the individual workers. We extend the Arabic dialect identification task to the Iraqi and Maghrebi dialects and improve the results of Zaidan and Callison-Burch (2011a) on Levantine, Gulf and Egyptian.

Details

Paper ID
lrec2014-main-510
Pages
pp. 241-245
BibKey
cotterell-callison-burch-2014-multi
Editor
N/A
Publisher
European Language Resources Association (ELRA)
ISSN
2522-2686
ISBN
978-2-9517408-8-4
Conference
Ninth International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation
Location
Reykjavik, Iceland
Date
26 May 2014 31 May 2014

Authors

  • RC

    Ryan Cotterell

  • CC

    Chris Callison-Burch

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