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Phrase Detectives Corpus 1.0 Crowdsourced Anaphoric Coreference.

Proceedings of the Tenth International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC 2016)

DOI:10.63317/3ha6azwmf87e

Abstract

Natural Language Engineering tasks require large and complex annotated datasets to build more advanced models of language. Corpora are typically annotated by several experts to create a gold standard; however, there are now compelling reasons to use a non-expert crowd to annotate text, driven by cost, speed and scalability. Phrase Detectives Corpus 1.0 is an anaphorically-annotated corpus of encyclopedic and narrative text that contains a gold standard created by multiple experts, as well as a set of annotations created by a large non-expert crowd. Analysis shows very good inter-expert agreement (kappa=.88-.93) but a more variable baseline crowd agreement (kappa=.52-.96). Encyclopedic texts show less agreement (and by implication are harder to annotate) than narrative texts. The release of this corpus is intended to encourage research into the use of crowds for text annotation and the development of more advanced, probabilistic language models, in particular for anaphoric coreference.

Details

Paper ID
lrec2016-main-323
Pages
pp. 2039-2046
BibKey
chamberlain-etal-2016-phrase
Editor
N/A
Publisher
European Language Resources Association (ELRA)
ISSN
2522-2686
ISBN
978-2-9517408-9-1
Conference
Tenth International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation
Location
Portorož, Slovenia
Date
23 May 2016 28 May 2016

Authors

  • JC

    Jon Chamberlain

  • MP

    Massimo Poesio

  • UK

    Udo Kruschwitz

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