Difference between revisions of "User:Ariessa/proposal"

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== Which of the published tasks are you interested in? What do you plan to do? ==
 
== Which of the published tasks are you interested in? What do you plan to do? ==
   
None. I plan to add a new language pair, which is English-Malay (en-ms).
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None. I plan to add a new language pair, which is English-Malay (eng-zlm). Since the monolingual dictionaries for both languages are available at Apertium, I plan to use them alongside the zlm-eng dictionary.
 
 
 
 
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== Title ==
 
== Title ==
   
Add English-Malay language pair (en-ms)
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Add English-Malay language pair (eng-zlm)
 
 
 
 
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'''Week 1 - Week 2:'''
 
'''Week 1 - Week 2:'''
*Work on the morphological dictionaries
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*Work on the morphological dictionaries by expanding them
 
 
   
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Working on it...
 
Working on it...
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== Resources ==
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*[[Apertium_New_Language_Pair_HOWTO]]
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*[[Minimal_installation_from_SVN]]
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*[[Morphological_dictionary]]

Revision as of 05:54, 28 March 2017

Contact Info

Name: Nurul Ariessa Binti Norramli

E-mail: ariessa.norramli@gmail.com

IRC: ariessa

Location: Malaysia

Timezone: UTC+08:00


Why is it you are interested in machine translation?

Because machine translation platforms like Apertium, Google Translate and Bing Translator helps me a lot in writing. They are very useful when you need simple translations from one language to another. Other than that, the concept of machine translation itself is simply fascinating for me. Isn’t it amazing knowing and seeing that machines are capable of doing things that we thought were only feasible by humans? Through machine translation systems, people can translate one language to any language available in the world. Machine translation empowers people in learning multiple languages. As being a polyglot is my personal goal, I definitely need machine translation platforms in the process of being one. Not just that, machine translation is very interesting in the sense that it bridges the communication gap caused by distinct languages. Frankly speaking, it’s super annoying to not being able to communicate with people. It’s hard when you can’t express your opinions just because of language restrictions.


Why is it that you are interested in Apertium?

I love open source stuffs and Apertium sure is one! Plus, I want to contribute to open source projects and I believe Apertium is the best platform for me to start and learn about contributing. Since it’s open source, people from all over the globe can participate in this project and create a better MT system. It's a common fact that languages change rapidly as year goes by. The phrase that you’re using now could be dead or considered obsolete by your future grandchildren. What’s being used now, wouldn’t be used in the future. Since it’s always changing, it’s best if there is a MT system that enables people to keep on improving the language pair according to the current standard. On top of that, Apertium is a project that combines linguistics and computing. It has two of my favourite subjects in the world. Furthermore, I want to deepen my knowledge about computational linguistics.


Which of the published tasks are you interested in? What do you plan to do?

None. I plan to add a new language pair, which is English-Malay (eng-zlm). Since the monolingual dictionaries for both languages are available at Apertium, I plan to use them alongside the zlm-eng dictionary.


Title

Add English-Malay language pair (eng-zlm)


Why Google and Apertium should sponsor it? How and who it will benefit in society?

I saw that Apertium doesn't offer translation for English-Malay and vice versa. As a native Malay speaker, I feel that the English-Malay language pair should exist in Apertium. This is because the Malay language or Bahasa Melayu is used in numerous countries like Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia, Brunei and some part of Thailand. It is a vital language for the Southeast Asians. By doing this, Apertium can reach more audience. Consequently, it could attract more developers, translators or linguists to contribute to Apertium. This could then lead to an active and ongoing development of Apertium. Not just that, more language pairs will be added too since most Southeast Asians speak more than one language. In my case, I know English, Bahasa Melayu, basic Japanese and basic Arabic. Besides, the existing MT systems for this pair are not free/open source and use statistical MT(SMT) systems which are different from Apertium. All in all, Google and Apertium should sponsor this project as it can introduce the Southeast Asians to this machine translation platform.


Work plan

Before GSOC starts

  • Installed Apertium on Ubuntu
  • Installed lttoolbox
  • Installed id-ms and practice with this language pair
  • Read the Apertium wikis on how to add a new language pair
  • Improve my knowledge about linguistics related to Malay and English languages
  • Begin working on the morphological dictionary


Week 1 - Week 2:

  • Work on the morphological dictionaries by expanding them


Week 3:

  • Work on the bilingual dictionary


Week 4:

  • Get parallel corpus by translating Wikipedia articles from English to Malay
  • Expand bilingual dictionaries with Giza++


Deliverable #1 Morphological dictionaries and bilingual dictionary


Week 5 - Week 6:

  • Get parallel corpus by translating Wikipedia articles from English to Malay
  • Write the transfer rules


Week 7:

  • Work on bidix
  • Add more words to the dictionaries


Week 8:

  • 3-day break
  • Work on bidix


Deliverable #2 Transfer rules


Week 9:

  • Expand bilingual dictionaries
  • Write more transfer rules


Week 10:

  • Work on bidix


Week 11:

  • Write an article about the grammatical difference between English and Malay
  • Debug any problems


Week 12:

  • Evaluate using testvoc, WER and trimmed coverage
  • Brush up the project


Project completed


List your skills and give evidence of your qualifications.

C, C++, Python, JavaScript, BASH and some HTML & CSS. I’m currently taking an introductory course about C language at a local university. As for the other languages, it was self-taught.


Tell us what is your current field of study, major, etc.

I’m currently taking a pre-university program called Foundation in Engineering at Universiti Teknologi Mara Kampus Dengkil, Malaysia.


Convince us that you can do the work.

I was a Google Code-In (GCI) 2015 finalist for MetaBrainz Foundation. So, I dare say that I can work on deadlines. Being a fast learner is one of my strong points. As I was a self-taught coder, I would google about something that’s out of my knowledge first before asking around at online forums. Also, I’m a very passionate and hardworking person when it comes to writing and coding. Moreover, I always give my all when working. On top of that, I’m also a freelance writer. I’m used to work in 2-day deadline. Thus, I can assure you that I got what it takes.


In particular, we would like to know whether you have programmed before in open-source projects.

Yes but it was only a single pull request task for GCI 2015.


Non-Summer-of-Code plans for the Summer

Aside from participating in Google Summer of Code, I’m going to work as a freelance writer. Even so, my writing time is only 3 hours every day.


Schedules and time commitments

I’m having my finals right now. But when GSoC starts, I’ll be on a 5-months break. I’ll be finishing school by early April 2017. So, I’m confident that I’ll have at least 30 free hours a week.


Coding Challenge

Working on it...


Resources