69 research outputs found

    An automatic diacritization algorithm for undiacritized Arabic text

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    Modern Standard Arabic (MSA) is used today in most written and some spoken media. It is, however, not the native dialect of any country. Recently, the rate of the written dialectal Arabic text increased dramatically. Most of these texts have been written in the Egyptian dialectal, as it is considered the most widely used dialect and understandable throughout the Middle East. Like other Semitic languages, in written Arabic, short vowels are not written, but are represented by diacritic marks. Nonetheless, these marks are not used in most of the modern Arabic texts (for example books and newspapers). The absence of diacritic marks creates a huge ambiguity, as the un-diacritized word may correspond to more than one correct diacritization (vowelization) form. Hence, the aim of this research is to reduce the ambiguity of the absences of diacritic marks using hybrid algorithm with significantly higher accuracy than the state-of-the-art systems for MSA. Moreover, this research is to implement and evaluate the accuracy of the algorithm for dialectal Arabic text. The design of the proposed algorithm based on two main techniques as follows: statistical n-gram along with maximum likelihood estimation and morphological analyzer. Merging the word, morpheme, and letter levels with their sub-models together into one platform in order to improve the automatic diacritization accuracy is the proposition of this research. Moreover, by utilizing the feature of the case ending diacritization, which is ignoring the diacritic mark on the last letter of the word, shows a significant error improvement. The reason for this remarkable improvement is that the Arabic language prohibits adding diacritic marks over some letters. The hybrid algorithm demonstrated a good performance of 97.9% when applied to MSA corpora (Tashkeela), 97.1% when applied on LDC’s Arabic Treebank-Part 3 v1.0 and 91.8% when applied to Egyptian dialectal corpus (CallHome). The main contribution of this research is the hybrid algorithm for automatic diacritization of undiacritized MSA text and dialectal Arabic text. The proposed algorithm applied and evaluated on Egyptian colloquial dialect, the most widely dialect understood and used throughout the Arab world, which is considered as first time based on the literature review

    Ensemble Morphosyntactic Analyser for Classical Arabic

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    Classical Arabic (CA) is an influential language for Muslim lives around the world. It is the language of two sources of Islamic laws: the Quran and the Sunnah, the collection of traditions and sayings attributed to the prophet Mohammed. However, classical Arabic in general, and the Sunnah, in particular, is underexplored and under-resourced in the field of computational linguistics. This study examines the possible directions for adapting existing tools, specifically morphological analysers, designed for modern standard Arabic (MSA) to classical Arabic. Morphological analysers of CA are limited, as well as the data for evaluating them. In this study, we adapt existing analysers and create a validation data-set from the Sunnah books. Inspired by the advances in deep learning and the promising results of ensemble methods, we developed a systematic method for transferring morphological analysis that is capable of handling different labelling systems and various sequence lengths. In this study, we handpicked the best four open access MSA morphological analysers. Data generated from these analysers are evaluated before and after adaptation through the existing Quranic Corpus and the Sunnah Arabic Corpus. The findings are as follows: first, it is feasible to analyse under-resourced languages using existing comparable language resources given a small sufficient set of annotated text. Second, analysers typically generate different errors and this could be exploited. Third, an explicit alignment of sequences and the mapping of labels is not necessary to achieve comparable accuracies given a sufficient size of training dataset. Adapting existing tools is easier than creating tools from scratch. The resulting quality is dependent on training data size and number and quality of input taggers. Pipeline architecture performs less well than the End-to-End neural network architecture due to error propagation and limitation on the output format. A valuable tool and data for annotating classical Arabic is made freely available

    Conversational Arabic Automatic Speech Recognition

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    Colloquial Arabic (CA) is the set of spoken variants of modern Arabic that exist in the form of regional dialects and are considered generally to be mother-tongues in those regions. CA has limited textual resource because it exists only as a spoken language and without a standardised written form. Normally the modern standard Arabic (MSA) writing convention is employed that has limitations in phonetically representing CA. Without phonetic dictionaries the pronunciation of CA words is ambiguous, and can only be obtained through word and/or sentence context. Moreover, CA inherits the MSA complex word structure where words can be created from attaching affixes to a word. In automatic speech recognition (ASR), commonly used approaches to model acoustic, pronunciation and word variability are language independent. However, one can observe significant differences in performance between English and CA, with the latter yielding up to three times higher error rates. This thesis investigates the main issues for the under-performance of CA ASR systems. The work focuses on two directions: first, the impact of limited lexical coverage, and insufficient training data for written CA on language modelling is investigated; second, obtaining better models for the acoustics and pronunciations by learning to transfer between written and spoken forms. Several original contributions result from each direction. Using data-driven classes from decomposed text are shown to reduce out-of-vocabulary rate. A novel colloquialisation system to import additional data is introduced; automatic diacritisation to restore the missing short vowels was found to yield good performance; and a new acoustic set for describing CA was defined. Using the proposed methods improved the ASR performance in terms of word error rate in a CA conversational telephone speech ASR task

    MIDV-500: a dataset for identity document analysis and recognition on mobile devices in video stream

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    A lot of research has been devoted to identity documents analysis and recognition on mobile devices. However, no publicly available datasets designed for this particular problem currently exist. There are a few datasets which are useful for associated subtasks but in order to facilitate a more comprehensive scientific and technical approach to identity document recognition more specialized datasets are required. In this paper we present a Mobile Identity Document Video dataset (MIDV-500) consisting of 500 video clips for 50 different identity document types with ground truth which allows to perform research in a wide scope of document analysis problems. The paper presents characteristics of the dataset and evaluation results for existing methods of face detection, text line recognition, and document fields data extraction. Since an important feature of identity documents is their sensitiveness as they contain personal data, all source document images used in MIDV-500 are either in public domain or distributed under public copyright licenses. The main goal of this paper is to present a dataset. However, in addition and as a baseline, we present evaluation results for existing methods for face detection, text line recognition, and document data extraction, using the presented dataset.This work is partially supported by Russian Foundation for Basic Research (projects 17-29-03170 and 17-29-03370). All source images for MIDV-500 dataset are obtained from Wikimedia Commons. Author attributions for each source images are listed in the description table at ftp://smartengines.com/midv-500/documents.pdf

    ONLINE ARABIC TEXT RECOGNITION USING STATISTICAL TECHNIQUES

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    The Future of Information Sciences : INFuture2009 : Digital Resources and Knowledge Sharing

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    Advances in Image Processing, Analysis and Recognition Technology

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    For many decades, researchers have been trying to make computers’ analysis of images as effective as the system of human vision is. For this purpose, many algorithms and systems have previously been created. The whole process covers various stages, including image processing, representation and recognition. The results of this work can be applied to many computer-assisted areas of everyday life. They improve particular activities and provide handy tools, which are sometimes only for entertainment, but quite often, they significantly increase our safety. In fact, the practical implementation of image processing algorithms is particularly wide. Moreover, the rapid growth of computational complexity and computer efficiency has allowed for the development of more sophisticated and effective algorithms and tools. Although significant progress has been made so far, many issues still remain, resulting in the need for the development of novel approaches

    XVIII. Magyar Számítógépes Nyelvészeti Konferencia

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