[Corpora-List] A corpus of text messages
otlogetswe at gmail.com
otlogetswe at gmail.com
Tue Apr 17 04:50:43 UTC 2012
We wish to compile a corpus of text messages for a research project. Does anybody know if it is possible for contributors of text messages to connect their phones to a computer and copy the entire inbox or sent messages into a computer? We would very appreciate suggestions of this could be done.
Regards
Thapelo
*molaetsa o, o rometswe ka mogala*ing in his paper (he obtained it by emailing the authors, I guess), in addition to an artificially generated test set:Aminul Islam and Diana Inkpen, "Correcting Different Types of Errors in Texts", in Proceedings of the 24th Canadian Conference on Artificial Intelligence (AI 2011), St-John's, NFL, Canada, May 2011, pp. 192-203, pdf file. Diana From: corpora-bounces at uib.no [mailto:corpora-bounces at uib.no] On Behalf Of Anabela Barreiro
Sent: April-16-12 6:34 AM
To: Krishnamurthy, Ramesh
Cc: corpora at uib.no
Subject: Re: [Corpora-List] corpora of grammatical errors Dear Corpora-List Members, I would like to thank all who have sent me individual e-mails with suggestions, including indication on where to find corpora for languages other than English and the Romance languages.
In reply to Ramesh,
I would say that they all contain sentences with grammatical errors. I am interested in corpora where all sentences have errors on particular aspects of the grammar (prepositions, verb tenses, negation, coordination, etc., etc., etc.) with some pre-selection and pre-categorization of the ungrammaticality of the sentences. In the past, system developers used what was called "test suites", mostly fabricated by linguists for the specific purpose of testing a particular system. I am interested in sentences that come from "real" usage of language by non-native speakers, but also native speakers with writing difficulties or writing texts where language and style is not optimized or could be improved. When supporting editing of a text, existing grammar checkers are not sophisticated enough to identify all the grammar problems and often identify as a problem perfectly correct sentences (false positives and false negatives). In addition to correction, there is also the potential for providing better solutions for writing (including more categories to the typology)... For example, I can fix support verb constructions with "weak" verbs into semantically "strong" verbs, which gives the text a more professional style, eliminates words that are unecessary, helps texts being translated more efficiently by humans and machines, etc.
>From my request on this list, I found out that there is an ongoing shared task concerned with the automated correction of errors in text by Robert Dale and Adam Kilgarriff :
http://clt.mq.edu.au/research/projects/hoo/
This is a especially interesting task because it groups errors into linguistic categories. Hoo already includes preposition and determiner errors in exam scripts authored by learners of English as a Second Language, but their goal is to enlarge the typology of linguistic errors. That's all I wished for :)
Thank you all,
Anabela-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Think GREEN - Act GREEN!
Anabela M. Barreiro
Personal webpage: https://www.l2f.inesc-id.pt/wiki/index.php/Anabela_BarreiroLinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/anabelabarreiro
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------From: r.krishnamurthy at aston.ac.uk
To: barreiro_anabela at hotmail.com
CC: corpora at uib.no
Subject: corpora of grammatical errors
Date: Sun, 15 Apr 2012 12:42:20 +0000Hi Anabela #1 Do ALL the currently available public corpora not ‘contain sentences with grammatical errors’?Very few (if any) texts will be 100% grammatically ‘correct’ (whichever model of grammar you use)?So BNC, COCA, etc should be OK for you?But the specific ‘errors’ your system identifies will of course depend on your choice of model. #2 If you want a corpus with a high proportion of ‘errors’, would any available LANGUAGE LEARNER, NON-NATIVE-SPEAKER, NON-STANDARD, or VARIETAL corpus be sufficient for your purposes? Thesecorpora should be easy to find via Google, by specifying one of those attributes? Hope this helpsRamesh Ramesh KrishnamurthyVisiting Academic Fellow, School of Languages and Social Sciences, Aston University, Birmingham B4 7ET
Director, ACORN (Aston Corpus Network project): http://acorn.aston.ac.uk/ Corpus Analyst:(a) GeWiss (Volkswagen Foundation) project: http://www1.aston.ac.uk/lss/research/research-projects/gewiss-spoken-academic-discourse/(b) Discourse of Climate Change: http://www1.aston.ac.uk/lss/research/research-projects/discourse-of-climate-change-project/(c) Feminism: http://acorn.aston.ac.uk/projects.html(d) COMENEGO (Corpus Multilingüe de Economía y Negocios) - Multilingual Corpus of Business and Economics: http://dti.ua.es/comenego(e) European Phraseology Project: http://labidiomas3.ua.es/phraseology/login/login.php------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Sat, 14 Apr 2012 10:24:50 +0000From: Anabela Barreiro <barreiro_anabela at hotmail.com>Subject: [Corpora-List] corpora of grammatical errorsTo: "corpora at uib.no" <corpora at uib.no> Dear Corpora List Members,I am looking for public corpora containing sentences with grammatical errors.I plan to use the corpora as input to grammar checking and correction routines.The corpora can be in English or romance languages. I appreciate any indication of where I can find those corpora. Thank you!
_______________________________________________
UNSUBSCRIBE from this page: http://mailman.uib.no/options/corpora
Corpora mailing list
Corpora at uib.no
http://mailman.uib.no/listinfo/corpora
More information about the Corpora
mailing list