2021
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Findings of the VarDial Evaluation Campaign 2021
Bharathi Raja Chakravarthi
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Gaman Mihaela
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Radu Tudor Ionescu
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Heidi Jauhiainen
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Tommi Jauhiainen
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Krister Lindén
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Nikola Ljubešić
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Niko Partanen
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Ruba Priyadharshini
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Christoph Purschke
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Eswari Rajagopal
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Yves Scherrer
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Marcos Zampieri
Proceedings of the Eighth Workshop on NLP for Similar Languages, Varieties and Dialects
This paper describes the results of the shared tasks organized as part of the VarDial Evaluation Campaign 2021. The campaign was part of the eighth workshop on Natural Language Processing (NLP) for Similar Languages, Varieties and Dialects (VarDial), co-located with EACL 2021. Four separate shared tasks were included this year: Dravidian Language Identification (DLI), Romanian Dialect Identification (RDI), Social Media Variety Geolocation (SMG), and Uralic Language Identification (ULI). DLI was organized for the first time and the other three continued a series of tasks from previous evaluation campaigns.
2020
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A Report on the VarDial Evaluation Campaign 2020
Mihaela Gaman
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Dirk Hovy
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Radu Tudor Ionescu
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Heidi Jauhiainen
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Tommi Jauhiainen
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Krister Lindén
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Nikola Ljubešić
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Niko Partanen
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Christoph Purschke
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Yves Scherrer
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Marcos Zampieri
Proceedings of the 7th Workshop on NLP for Similar Languages, Varieties and Dialects
This paper presents the results of the VarDial Evaluation Campaign 2020 organized as part of the seventh workshop on Natural Language Processing (NLP) for Similar Languages, Varieties and Dialects (VarDial), co-located with COLING 2020. The campaign included three shared tasks each focusing on a different challenge of language and dialect identification: Romanian Dialect Identification (RDI), Social Media Variety Geolocation (SMG), and Uralic Language Identification (ULI). The campaign attracted 30 teams who enrolled to participate in one or multiple shared tasks and 14 of them submitted runs across the three shared tasks. Finally, 11 papers describing participating systems are published in the VarDial proceedings and referred to in this report.
2018
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Capturing Regional Variation with Distributed Place Representations and Geographic Retrofitting
Dirk Hovy
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Christoph Purschke
Proceedings of the 2018 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing
Dialects are one of the main drivers of language variation, a major challenge for natural language processing tools. In most languages, dialects exist along a continuum, and are commonly discretized by combining the extent of several preselected linguistic variables. However, the selection of these variables is theory-driven and itself insensitive to change. We use Doc2Vec on a corpus of 16.8M anonymous online posts in the German-speaking area to learn continuous document representations of cities. These representations capture continuous regional linguistic distinctions, and can serve as input to downstream NLP tasks sensitive to regional variation. By incorporating geographic information via retrofitting and agglomerative clustering with structure, we recover dialect areas at various levels of granularity. Evaluating these clusters against an existing dialect map, we achieve a match of up to 0.77 V-score (harmonic mean of cluster completeness and homogeneity). Our results show that representation learning with retrofitting offers a robust general method to automatically expose dialectal differences and regional variation at a finer granularity than was previously possible.