Can Character-based Language Models Improve Downstream Task Performance in Low-Resource and Noisy Language Scenarios?

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Abstract

Recent impressive improvements in NLP, largely based on the success of contextual neural language models, have been mostly demonstrated on at most a couple dozen high-resource languages. Building language models and, more generally, NLP systems for non-standardized and low-resource languages remains a challenging task. In this work, we focus on North-African colloquial dialectal Arabic written using an extension of the Latin script, called NArabizi, found mostly on social media and messaging communication. In this low-resource scenario with data displaying a high level of variability, we compare the downstream performance of a character-based language model on part-of-speech tagging and dependency parsing to that of monolingual and multilingual models. We show that a character-based model trained on only 99k sentences of NArabizi and fined-tuned on a small treebank of this language leads to performance close to those obtained with the same architecture pretrained on large multilingual and monolingual models. Confirming these results a on much larger data set of noisy French user-generated content, we argue that such character-based language models can be an asset for NLP in low-resource and high language variability settings.

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APA

Riabi, A., Sagot, B., & Seddah, D. (2021). Can Character-based Language Models Improve Downstream Task Performance in Low-Resource and Noisy Language Scenarios? In W-NUT 2021 - 7th Workshop on Noisy User-Generated Text, Proceedings of the Conference (pp. 423–436). Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL). https://doi.org/10.18653/v1/2021.wnut-1.47

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