Difference between revisions of "User:Srj31/GSOC 2020 proposal:Bengali-Hindi pair"
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জেমস '''লিখতে''' ভালোবাসেন - James loves to write - जेम्स को लिखना पसंद है |
জেমস '''লিখতে''' ভালোবাসেন - James loves to '''write''' - जेम्स को '''लिखना''' पसंद है |
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জেমস '''লিখতে''' ভাল - James is good at writing - जेम्स अच्छा लिखता हैं - |
জেমস '''লিখতে''' ভাল - James is good at '''writing''' - जेम्स अच्छा '''लिखता''' हैं - |
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জেমস '''লিখতে''' ভাল ছিল - James was good at writing - जेम्स लिखने में अच्छा था |
জেমস '''লিখতে''' ভাল ছিল - James was good at '''writing''' - जेम्स '''लिखने''' में अच्छा था |
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- Disambiguation is required for the genders, bengali verbs do not mark gender but hindi does. (solution: need the transfer rules to identify the gender from the subject of the sentence) |
- Disambiguation is required for the genders, bengali verbs do not mark gender but hindi does. (solution: need the transfer rules to identify the gender from the subject of the sentence) |
Revision as of 08:28, 29 March 2020
Contents
Contact information
Name: Sourabh Raj Jaiswal
Location: Noida, India
E-mail address: sourabhrj31@gmail.com
IRC: srj31
Timezone: UTC +5:30
Github: https://github.com/srj31
Why is it that you are interested in Machine Translation and Apertium?
I had been wanted to work on a project which involved Machine Translation and was intrigued by how computers could understand what we said.This curiosity got me into studying linguistics in high school. I came fifth at the National Linguistics Olympiad and had the honor of representing Team India at the International Linguistics Olympiad 2019 at South Korea. It was this experience and the 3 years of indulging in Linguistics along with my interest in NLP, that got me interested in a Machine Translation project. Apertium being an open source platform for developing rule-based machine translation systems, has intrigued me to contribute to this platform and I will have the opportunity to further create more language pairs for the various languages of India.
Which of the published tasks are you interested in? What do you plan to do?
I plan on working on Adopting the unreleased language pair Hindi-Bengali. I plan on improving the pair to be able to translate sentences coherently. As Bengali and Hindi are similar in various linguistic aspects, they will have similar rules thus machine translation would give correct sentences if done correctly.
How it will benefit
Bengali is the official and most widely spoken language of Bangladesh and second most widely spoken of the 22 scheduled languages of India, behind Hindi. Translation allows ideas and information to spread across cultures. In the process, translation changes history. With Hindi and bengali being the most widespread language in India, creating one for languages in India will provide the spread of culture and literature of India. The current Bengali-Hindi pair has only a bilingual dictionary having some of the noun words and not much. By doing this project I aim to create a working language pair which performs much better and can create a correct translation.
Work Plan
Post-application period: Find language resources for both and ben-hin Learn more regarding the Apertium dictionaries and tools
Community Bonding:
Getting familiar with all the Apertium modules and it’s working. Discussion with mentors and clearing doubts.
First Phase
Week 1 : Improving the monolingual dictionaries Adding nouns, prepositions, adjectives, adverbs in the bilingual dictionary of the ben-hin pair.
Week 2:
Adding verbs, pronouns, conjunctions in the bilingual dictionaries
Writing the transfer rules for verbs and nouns.
Week 3:
Continue improving the dictionaries and the transfer rules
Test the current workings
Week 4:
Update the documentation and prepare for the evaluation
Deliverable 1: Bilingual dictionaries and some transfer rules
Second Phase
Week 5: With the guidance of the mentors learn more about the morphological rules and to review the work from weeks 1-4. Fixing minor issues in bilingual and monolingual dictionaries. Perform testvoc/ corpus test
Week 6:
Write transfer rules for hin-ben transfer
Start working on CG and disambiguation
Week 7:
Continue with the disambiguation tests and its solutions
Week 8:
Test translations, make some improvements, fix some bugs and prepare for the evaluation
Deliverable 2: Provide coherent translation between the language pairs
Third Phase
Week 9:
Expand bilingual dictionaries and work on disambiguation rules
Week 10:
Testvoc and some improvements, More work on the transfer rules
Week 11:
Test with regular conversations plus text from newspapers or magazines
Week 12:
Write documentation, complete testing and fixing bugs
Final Evaluation
Coding Challenge
All the work has been saved in the GitHub repo: https://github.com/srj31/apertium-ben-hin I have also stored the story’s translation in Bengali and Hindi post-edited. Initially the pair did not have much in the bilingual dictionary. After learning through the resources available on the apertium wiki and by testing out the bn-en pair I started working on this pair.
These results are for ben -> hin
Work Done:
- Added entries to the bilingual dictionaries
- Added certain words to the monolingual dictionaries as well
- Locative cases of the nouns are handled now going from ben-> hin
- Negation marker is handled now when going from ben->hin
- Started working with the transfer rules
Issues pending:
- Translating from bengali to hindi requires genitive pronouns to agree with the gender (solution: get the gender of the noun following the pronoun)
- Hindi verbs do not have past tense tags in the monodix (solution: it seems they use the imprft tag instead of past)
- Bengali has same form for various tenses, thus disambiguation is required. (solution: manual disambiguation required)
e.g.
জেমস লিখতে ভালোবাসেন - James loves to write - जेम्स को लिखना पसंद है জেমস লিখতে ভাল - James is good at writing - जेम्स अच्छा लिखता हैं - জেমস লিখতে ভাল ছিল - James was good at writing - जेम्स लिखने में अच्छा था
- Disambiguation is required for the genders, bengali verbs do not mark gender but hindi does. (solution: need the transfer rules to identify the gender from the subject of the sentence)
Statistics about input files
Number of words in reference: 499
Number of words in test: 426
Number of unknown words (marked with a star) in test: 13
Percentage of unknown words: 3.05 %
Results when removing unknown-word marks (stars)
Edit distance: 226
Word error rate (WER): 45.29 %
Number of position-independent correct words: 295
Position-independent word error rate (PER): 40.88 %
Results when unknown-word marks (stars) are not removed
Edit distance: 226
Word Error Rate (WER): 45.29 %
Number of position-independent correct words: 295
Position-independent word error rate (PER): 40.88 %
Statistics about the translation of unknown words
Number of unknown words which were free rides: 0
Percentage of unknown words that were free rides: 0.00 %
'
Skill
Ongoing major : Bachelors in Mathematics and Computing
Relevant technical skills : Python(Advanced), XML(Intermediate), C++(Advanced), Java(intermediate)
Languages : Hindi(native), English(Advanced), Bengali(Advanced),
Experience :
I have studied many languages and linguistics in general during my preparation for the International Linguistics Olympiad 2019 and while creating and testing problems for the National Linguistic Olympiad , which has allowed me to formalise rules which are followed while translating from one language to another. I have done online courses on NLP on the online platform coursera and am proficient in Data Structures and Algorithms, through competitive programming.
Non Summer of Code plans
Though I have no plans other than Summer of Code, in the light of the Corona emergency, colleges might have to postpone our major examinations(still tentative), thus I will only be able to give 20hrs/week, and this should last 1 week or 2 weeks of the first phase. After which I will be having a summer break, during which I can work for 40+hrs/week.