Resources and Applications for Dialectal Arabic: the Case of Levantine
Abstract
This is a thesis about the computational study of Dialectal Arabic (DA). In particular, the thesis studies DA, with a special emphasis on Levantine Arabic, and develops tools and resources for the computational study of Dialectal Arabic Natural Language Processing (DANLP). It investigates the creation of fine-grained resources that can be used for a variety of computational tasks, and a number of effective models that can deal with the complexity of fine-grained dialectal data. Dialect Identification (DI), as well as Sentiment Analysis (SA) are the Natural Language Processing (NLP) tasks investigated in this thesis.
In the first part (Study 1 and Study 2), I study the DI task on both coarse-grained and fine-grained levels. For this reason, I build the first annotated Levantine (SHAMI) Dialect Corpus (SDC). Furthermore, I explore the ability of n-gram language models, Machine Learning (ML) algorithms and ensemble learning techniques to classify and detect 26 Arabic varieties. In the second part, I conduct a linguistic study to measure the lexical distance between MSA and DA, and between the dialects themselves. This is done to check whether transferring knowledge from one variety to another is possible. In the third part, studies 4,5 and 6, I explore Arabic Sentiment Analysis (SA). I investigate the idea of knowledge transfer between MSA and the dialects using SA as a case study. Furthermore, I implement various models such as the pre-trained language model BERT, Deep Learning (DL), ML and feature engineering approaches to detect the sentimental polarity of DA data. I introduce two valuable resources for this task, one focusing on Levantine sentiment (Shami-Senti), and the other for DA in general (ATSAD). I exploit different ways of annotation, e.g. human, lexicon-based and automatic distant supervision annotation. The last study is about choosing the best model for DI and SA. I exploit well-known models and approaches using various kinds of DA resources.
The thesis contributes to the field of DANLP in a number of ways. The introduced valuable resources can be seen as a stepping stone for a deeper investigation and understanding of issues in DANLP. They are also reliable and can be used by researchers to address different NLP tasks. The cross-dialectal linguistic studies will open up prospects for researchers to fine-tune models and transfer knowledge among Arabic varieties. A big part of the contribution lies in designing DI and SA models. I implement several ML models that use feature engineering approaches and N-gram language models to identify the dialect or detect the sentiment. For DI, I design and implement an ensemble learning model that is able to handle fine-grained dialects. Additionally, I exploit the usage of DL models on different SA dialectal datasets and achieve competitive results. For both tasks, I exploit the recent pre-trained language models and perform a comparison to choose the best model. I also implement a semi-supervised approach for automatic labelling and annotating data with the help of self-training techniques to improve the performance of the dataset. These models will help researchers dive deeper into DANLP and create practical and industrial systems.
Parts of work
Kathrein Abu Kwaik, Motaz Saad, Stergios Chatzikyriakidis and Simon Dobnik . "Shami: A corpus of levantine Arabic dialects." In proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference on Language Resources and Eval- uation (LREC 2018). 2018
https://aclanthology.org/L18-1576.pdf Kathrein Abu Kwaik and Motaz K Saad. "ArbDialectID at MADAR Shared Task 1: Language Modelling and Ensemble Learning for Fine Grained Ara- bic Dialect Identification." In ArbDialectID at MADAR Shared Task 1: Lan- guage Modelling and Ensemble Learning for Fine-Grained Arabic Dialect Identification. In proceedings of the Fourth Arabic Natural Language Pro- cessing Workshop (2019)
https://aclanthology.org/W19-4632.pdf Kwaik, Kathrein Abu, Motaz Saad, Stergios Chatzikyriakidis and Simon Dobnik. "A Lexical Distance Study of Arabic Dialects." Procedia computer science 142, (2018): pp. 2-13.
https://reader.elsevier.com/reader/sd/pii/S1877050918321562?token=6C8E8526DC9631AFE8D86D991307A11538589B3E14E325E6618895F005DBAE5FFE06C696F554CBBAA679E25B216AA28D&originRegion=eu-west-1&originCreation=20220422083106 Chatrine Qwaider, Stergios Chatzikyriakidis and Simon Dobnik. "Can Mod- ern Standard Arabic Approaches be used for Arabic Dialects? Sentiment Analysis as a Case Study." In proceedings of the 3rd Workshop on Arabic Corpus Linguistics, pp. 40-50. 2019.
https://aclanthology.org/W19-5606.pdf Kathrein Abu Kwaik, Motaz Saad, Stergios Chatzikyriakidis and Simon Dobnik. "LSTM-CNN Deep Learning Model for Sentiment Analysis of Di- alectal Arabic." In proceedings of the International Conference on Arabic Language Processing, pp. 108-121. Springer, Cham, 2019.
https://www.stergioschatzikyriakidis.com/uploads/1/0/3/6/10363759/icalp_deep_learning.pdf Kathrein Abu Kwaik, Stergios Chatzikyriakidis, Simon Dobnik, Motaz Saad and Richard Johansson. "An Arabic Tweets Sentiment Analysis Dataset (ATSAD) using Distant Supervision and Self Training." In proceedings of the 4th Workshop on Open-Source Arabic Corpora and Processing Tools, with a Shared Task on Offensive Language Detection, pp. 1-8. 2020.
https://aclanthology.org/2020.osact-1.1.pdf Kathrein Abu Kwaik, Stergios Chatzikyriakidis and Simon Dobnik "Pre- trained models or feature engineering? The case of Arabic Dialectal Identi- fication and Sentiment Analysis"
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Humanistiska fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Humanities
Institution
Department of Philosophy, Linguistics and Theory of Science ; Institutionen för filosofi, lingvistik och vetenskapsteori
Disputation
Onsdag den 25 maj 2022, kl. 15:00, May 25, 2022, J439, Lilla Hörsalen, Humanisten, Renströmsgatan 6, Gothenburg.
Date of defence
2022-05-25
chatrine.qwaider@chalmers.se
kathrein.abu.kwaik@gu.se
Date
2022-05-03Author
Qwaider, Chatrine
Abu Kwaik, Kathrein
Keywords
Dialectal Arabic Natural Language Processing
Computational Linguistics
Dialect Identification
Sentiment Analysis
Machine Learning
Deep Learning
Language modelling
Natural Language processing
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-8009-803-8 (print) 978-91-8009-804-5(pdf)
Language
eng