Biswanath Barik


2018

pdf
Named Entity Recognition on Code-Switched Data Using Conditional Random Fields
Utpal Kumar Sikdar | Biswanath Barik | Björn Gambäck
Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Computational Approaches to Linguistic Code-Switching

Named Entity Recognition is an important information extraction task that identifies proper names in unstructured texts and classifies them into some pre-defined categories. Identification of named entities in code-mixed social media texts is a more difficult and challenging task as the contexts are short, ambiguous and often noisy. This work proposes a Conditional Random Fields based named entity recognition system to identify proper names in code-switched data and classify them into nine categories. The system ranked fifth among nine participant systems and achieved a 59.25% F1-score.

pdf
NTNU at SemEval-2018 Task 7: Classifier Ensembling for Semantic Relation Identification and Classification in Scientific Papers
Biswanath Barik | Utpal Kumar Sikdar | Björn Gambäck
Proceedings of the 12th International Workshop on Semantic Evaluation

The paper presents NTNU’s contribution to SemEval-2018 Task 7 on relation identification and classification. The class weights and parameters of five alternative supervised classifiers were optimized through grid search and cross-validation. The outputs of the classifiers were combined through voting for the final prediction. A wide variety of features were explored, with the most informative identified by feature selection. The best setting achieved F1 scores of 47.4% and 66.0% in the relation classification subtasks 1.1 and 1.2. For relation identification and classification in subtask 2, it achieved F1 scores of 33.9% and 17.0%,

pdf
Flytxt_NTNU at SemEval-2018 Task 8: Identifying and Classifying Malware Text Using Conditional Random Fields and Naïve Bayes Classifiers
Utpal Kumar Sikdar | Biswanath Barik | Björn Gambäck
Proceedings of the 12th International Workshop on Semantic Evaluation

Cybersecurity risks such as malware threaten the personal safety of users, but to identify malware text is a major challenge. The paper proposes a supervised learning approach to identifying malware sentences given a document (subTask1 of SemEval 2018, Task 8), as well as to classifying malware tokens in the sentences (subTask2). The approach achieved good results, ranking second of twelve participants for both subtasks, with F-scores of 57% for subTask1 and 28% for subTask2.

2017

pdf
NTNU-1@ScienceIE at SemEval-2017 Task 10: Identifying and Labelling Keyphrases with Conditional Random Fields
Erwin Marsi | Utpal Kumar Sikdar | Cristina Marco | Biswanath Barik | Rune Sætre
Proceedings of the 11th International Workshop on Semantic Evaluation (SemEval-2017)

We present NTNU’s systems for Task A (prediction of keyphrases) and Task B (labelling as Material, Process or Task) at SemEval 2017 Task 10: Extracting Keyphrases and Relations from Scientific Publications (Augenstein et al., 2017). Our approach relies on supervised machine learning using Conditional Random Fields. Our system yields a micro F-score of 0.34 for Tasks A and B combined on the test data. For Task C (relation extraction), we relied on an independently developed system described in (Barik and Marsi, 2017). For the full Scenario 1 (including relations), our approach reaches a micro F-score of 0.33 (5th place). Here we describe our systems, report results and discuss errors.

pdf
NTNU-2 at SemEval-2017 Task 10: Identifying Synonym and Hyponym Relations among Keyphrases in Scientific Documents
Biswanath Barik | Erwin Marsi
Proceedings of the 11th International Workshop on Semantic Evaluation (SemEval-2017)

This paper presents our relation extraction system for subtask C of SemEval-2017 Task 10: ScienceIE. Assuming that the keyphrases are already annotated in the input data, our work explores a wide range of linguistic features, applies various feature selection techniques, optimizes the hyper parameters and class weights and experiments with different problem formulations (single classification model vs individual classifiers for each keyphrase type, single-step classifier vs pipeline classifier for hyponym relations). Performance of five popular classification algorithms are evaluated for each problem formulation along with feature selection. The best setting achieved an F1 score of 71.0% for synonym and 30.0% for hyponym relation on the test data.

2014

pdf
Handling Plurality in Bengali Noun Phrases
Biswanath Barik | Sudeshna Sarkar
Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Natural Language Processing

2012

pdf
Repairing Bengali Verb Chunks for Improved Bengali to Hindi Machine Translation
Sanjay Chatterji | Nabanita Datta | Arnab Dhar | Biswanath Barik | Sudeshna Sarkar | Anupam Basu
Proceedings of the 10th Workshop on Asian Language Resources