@inproceedings{rehbein-etal-2020-improving,
title = "Improving Sentence Boundary Detection for Spoken Language Transcripts",
author = "Rehbein, Ines and
Ruppenhofer, Josef and
Schmidt, Thomas",
editor = "Calzolari, Nicoletta and
B{\'e}chet, Fr{\'e}d{\'e}ric and
Blache, Philippe and
Choukri, Khalid and
Cieri, Christopher and
Declerck, Thierry and
Goggi, Sara and
Isahara, Hitoshi and
Maegaard, Bente and
Mariani, Joseph and
Mazo, H{\'e}l{\`e}ne and
Moreno, Asuncion and
Odijk, Jan and
Piperidis, Stelios",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the Twelfth Language Resources and Evaluation Conference",
month = may,
year = "2020",
address = "Marseille, France",
publisher = "European Language Resources Association",
url = "https://preview.aclanthology.org/jlcl-multiple-ingestion/2020.lrec-1.878/",
pages = "7102--7111",
language = "eng",
ISBN = "979-10-95546-34-4",
abstract = "This paper presents experiments on sentence boundary detection in transcripts of spoken dialogues. Segmenting spoken language into sentence-like units is a challenging task, due to disfluencies, ungrammatical or fragmented structures and the lack of punctuation. In addition, one of the main bottlenecks for many NLP applications for spoken language is the small size of the training data, as the transcription and annotation of spoken language is by far more time-consuming and labour-intensive than processing written language. We therefore investigate the benefits of data expansion and transfer learning and test different ML architectures for this task. Our results show that data expansion is not straightforward and even data from the same domain does not always improve results. They also highlight the importance of modelling, i.e. of finding the best architecture and data representation for the task at hand. For the detection of boundaries in spoken language transcripts, we achieve a substantial improvement when framing the boundary detection problem assentence pair classification task, as compared to a sequence tagging approach."
}
Markdown (Informal)
[Improving Sentence Boundary Detection for Spoken Language Transcripts](https://preview.aclanthology.org/jlcl-multiple-ingestion/2020.lrec-1.878/) (Rehbein et al., LREC 2020)
ACL