@inproceedings{mraikhat-etal-2024-areej,
title = "{AREE}j: {A}rabic Relation Extraction with Evidence",
author = "Rakan Al Mraikhat, Osama and
Hamoud, Hadi and
Zaraket, Fadi A.",
editor = "Habash, Nizar and
Bouamor, Houda and
Eskander, Ramy and
Tomeh, Nadi and
Abu Farha, Ibrahim and
Abdelali, Ahmed and
Touileb, Samia and
Hamed, Injy and
Onaizan, Yaser and
Alhafni, Bashar and
Antoun, Wissam and
Khalifa, Salam and
Haddad, Hatem and
Zitouni, Imed and
AlKhamissi, Badr and
Almatham, Rawan and
Mrini, Khalil",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the Second Arabic Natural Language Processing Conference",
month = aug,
year = "2024",
address = "Bangkok, Thailand",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://preview.aclanthology.org/fix-sig-urls/2024.arabicnlp-1.6/",
doi = "10.18653/v1/2024.arabicnlp-1.6",
pages = "67--72",
abstract = "Relational entity extraction is key in building knowledge graphs. A relational entity has a source, a tail and a type. In this paper, we consider Arabic text and introduce evidence enrichment which intuitively informs models for better predictions. Relational evidence is an expression in the text that explains how sources and targets relate. This paper augments the existing SRED$^{FM}$ relational extraction dataset with evidence annotation to its 2.9-million Arabic relations. We leverage the augmented dataset to build AREEj, a relation extraction with evidence model from Arabic documents. The evidence augmentation model we constructed to complete the dataset achieved .82 F1-score (.93 precision, .73 recall). The target AREEj outperformed SOTA mREBEL with .72 F1-score (.78 precision, .66 recall)."
}
Markdown (Informal)
[AREEj: Arabic Relation Extraction with Evidence](https://preview.aclanthology.org/fix-sig-urls/2024.arabicnlp-1.6/) (Rakan Al Mraikhat et al., ArabicNLP 2024)
ACL
- Osama Rakan Al Mraikhat, Hadi Hamoud, and Fadi A. Zaraket. 2024. AREEj: Arabic Relation Extraction with Evidence. In Proceedings of the Second Arabic Natural Language Processing Conference, pages 67–72, Bangkok, Thailand. Association for Computational Linguistics.