Arabic Dialect Identification
Author(s) -
Omar F. Zaidan,
Chris Callison-Burch
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
computational linguistics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1530-9312
pISSN - 0891-2017
DOI - 10.1162/coli_a_00169
Subject(s) - computer science , natural language processing , identification (biology) , annotation , modern standard arabic , set (abstract data type) , artificial intelligence , variety (cybernetics) , task (project management) , sentence , arabic , crowdsourcing , newspaper , linguistics , world wide web , philosophy , botany , business , management , advertising , economics , biology , programming language
The written form of the Arabic language, Modern Standard Arabic MSA, differs in a non-trivial manner from the various spoken regional dialects of Arabic \"the true native language\"ï¾of Arabic speakers. Those dialects, in turn, differ quite a bit from each other. However, due to MSA's prevalence in written form, almost all Arabic data sets have predominantly MSA content. In this article, we describe the creation of a novel Arabic resource with dialect annotations. We have created a large monolingual data set rich in dialectal Arabic content called the Arabic On-line Commentary Data set Zaidan and Callison-Burch 2011. We describe our annotation effort to identify the dialect level and dialect itself in each of more than 100,000 sentences from the data set by crowdsourcing the annotation task, and delve into interesting annotator behaviors like over-identification of one's own dialect. Using this new annotated data set, we consider the task of Arabic dialect identification: Given the word sequence forming an Arabic sentence, determine the variety of Arabic in which it is written. We use the data to train and evaluate automatic classifiers for dialect identification, and establish that classifiers using dialectal data significantly and dramatically outperform baselines that use MSA-only data, achieving near-human classification accuracy. Finally, we apply our classifiers to discover dialectical data from a large Web crawl consisting of 3.5 million pages mined from on-line Arabic newspapers.
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