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Automatic Restoration of Diacritics for Igbo Language

Ignatius Ezeani, Mark Hepple, Ikechukwu Onyenwe, Petr Sojka (Editor), Aleš Horák (Editor), Ivan Kopeček (Editor), Karel Pala (Editor)

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

7 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Igbo is a low-resource African language with orthographic and tonal diacritics, which capture distinctions between words that are important for both meaning and pronunciation, and hence of potential value for a range of language processing tasks. Such diacritics, however, are often largely absent from the electronic texts we might want to process, or assemble into corpora, and so the need arises for effective methods for automatic diacritic restoration for Igbo. In this paper, we experiment using an Igbo bible corpus, which is extensively marked for vowel distinctions, and partially for tonal distinctions, and attempt the task of reinstating these diacritics when they have been deleted. We investigate a number of word-level diacritic restoration methods, based on n-grams, under a closed-world assumption, achieving an accuracy of 98.83 % with our most effective method.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationInternational Conference on Text, Speech, and Dialogue
Subtitle of host publicationTSD 2016: Text, Speech, and Dialogue
PublisherSpringer
Pages198-205
Number of pages8
ISBN (Print)9783319455099
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1/01/2016

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