@inproceedings{baumann-pierrehumbert-2014-using,
title = "Using Resource-Rich Languages to Improve Morphological Analysis of Under-Resourced Languages",
author = "Baumann, Peter and
Pierrehumbert, Janet",
editor = "Calzolari, Nicoletta and
Choukri, Khalid and
Declerck, Thierry and
Loftsson, Hrafn and
Maegaard, Bente and
Mariani, Joseph and
Moreno, Asuncion and
Odijk, Jan and
Piperidis, Stelios",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the Ninth International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation ({LREC}'14)",
month = may,
year = "2014",
address = "Reykjavik, Iceland",
publisher = "European Language Resources Association (ELRA)",
url = "https://preview.aclanthology.org/fix-sig-urls/L14-1035/",
pages = "3355--3359",
abstract = "The world-wide proliferation of digital communications has created the need for language and speech processing systems for under-resourced languages. Developing such systems is challenging if only small data sets are available, and the problem is exacerbated for languages with highly productive morphology. However, many under-resourced languages are spoken in multi-lingual environments together with at least one resource-rich language and thus have numerous borrowings from resource-rich languages. Based on this insight, we argue that readily available resources from resource-rich languages can be used to bootstrap the morphological analyses of under-resourced languages with complex and productive morphological systems. In a case study of two such languages, Tagalog and Zulu, we show that an easily obtainable English wordlist can be deployed to seed a morphological analysis algorithm from a small training set of conversational transcripts. Our method achieves a precision of 100{\%} and identifies 28 and 66 of the most productive affixes in Tagalog and Zulu, respectively."
}
Markdown (Informal)
[Using Resource-Rich Languages to Improve Morphological Analysis of Under-Resourced Languages](https://preview.aclanthology.org/fix-sig-urls/L14-1035/) (Baumann & Pierrehumbert, LREC 2014)
ACL