Cheyenne Wing
2025
Ihquin tlahtouah in Tetelahtzincocah: An annotated, multi-purpose audio and text corpus of Western Sierra Puebla Nahuatl
Robert Pugh
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Cheyenne Wing
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María Ximena Juárez Huerta
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Ángeles Márquez Hernandez
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Francis Tyers
Proceedings of the 2025 Conference of the Nations of the Americas Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technologies (Volume 1: Long Papers)
The development of digital linguistic resources is essential for enhancing the inclusion of indigenous and marginalized languages in the digital domain. Indigenous languages of Mexico, despite representing vast typological diversity and millions of speakers, have largely been overlooked in NLP until recently. In this paper, we present a corpus of audio and annotated transcriptions of Western Sierra Puebla Nahuatl, an endangered variety of Nahuatl spoken in Puebla, Mexico. The data made available in this corpus are useful for ASR, spelling normalization, and word-level language identification. We detail the corpus-creation process, and describe experiments to report benchmark results for each of these important NLP tasks. The corpus audio and text is made freely available.
2023
Morphological reinflection with weighted finite-state transducers
Alice Kwak
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Michael Hammond
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Cheyenne Wing
Proceedings of the 20th SIGMORPHON workshop on Computational Research in Phonetics, Phonology, and Morphology
This paper describes the submission by the University of Arizona to the SIGMORPHON 2023 Shared Task on typologically diverse morphological (re-)infection. In our submission, we investigate the role of frequency, length, and weighted transducers in addressing the challenge of morphological reinflection. We start with the non-neural baseline provided for the task and show how some improvement can be gained by integrating length and frequency in prefix selection. We also investigate using weighted finite-state transducers, jump-started from edit distance and directly augmented with frequency. Our specific technique is promising and quite simple, but we see only modest improvements for some languages here.