Olga Lovick


2025

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AI for Interlinearization and POS-tagging: Teaching Linguists to Fish
Olga Kriukova | Katherine Schmirler | Sarah Moeller | Olga Lovick | Inge Genee | Antti Arppe | Alexandra Smith
Proceedings of the Eight Workshop on the Use of Computational Methods in the Study of Endangered Languages

This paper describes the process and learn- ing outcomes of a three-day workshop on ma- chine learning basics for documentary linguists. During this workshop, two groups of linguists working with two Indigenous languages of North America, Blackfoot and Dënë Su ̨łıné, became acquainted with machine learning prin- ciples, explored how machine learning can be used in data processing for under-resourced languages and then applied different machine learning methods for automatic morphologi- cal interlinearization and parts-of-speech tag- ging. As a result, participants discovered paths to greater collaboration between computer sci- ence and documentary linguistics and reflected on how linguists might be enabled to apply ma- chine learning with less dependence on experts.

2018

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A Computational Architecture for the Morphology of Upper Tanana
Olga Lovick | Christopher Cox | Miikka Silfverberg | Antti Arppe | Mans Hulden
Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC 2018)

2016

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The Alaskan Athabascan Grammar Database
Sebastian Nordhoff | Siri Tuttle | Olga Lovick
Proceedings of the Tenth International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC'16)

This paper describes a repository of example sentences in three endangered Athabascan languages: Koyukon, Upper Tanana, Lower Tanana. The repository allows researchers or language teachers to browse the example sentence corpus to either investigate the languages or to prepare teaching materials. The originally heterogeneous text collection was imported into a SOLR store via the POIO bridge. This paper describes the requirements, implementation, advantages and drawbacks of this approach and discusses the potential to apply it for other languages of the Athabascan family or beyond.