Implementing universal dependency, morphology, and multiword expression annotation standards for Turkish language processing

Umut Sulubacak, Gülsen Eryig It*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

20 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Released only a year ago as the outputs of a research project (“Parsing Web 2.0 Sentences”, supported in part by a TÜBITAK 1001 grant (No. 112E276) and a part of the ICT COST Action PARSEME (IC1207)), IMST and IWT are currently the most comprehensive Turkish dependency treebanks in the literature. This article introduces the final states of our treebanks, as well as a newly integrated hierarchical categorization of the multiheaded dependencies and their organization in an exclusive deep dependency layer in the treebanks. It also presents the adaptation of recent studies on standardizing multiword expression and named entity annotation schemes for the Turkish language and integration of benchmark annotations into the dependency layers of our treebanks and the mapping of the treebanks to the latest Universal Dependencies (v2.0) standard, ensuring further compliance with rising universal annotation trends. In addition to significantly boosting the universal recognition of Turkish treebanks, our recent efforts have shown an improvement in their syntactic parsing performance (up to 77.8%/82.8% LAS and 84.0%/87.9% UAS for IMST/IWT, respectively). The final states of the treebanks are expected to be more suited to different natural language processing tasks, such as named entity recognition, multiword expression detection, transfer-based machine translation, semantic parsing, and semantic role labeling.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1662-1672
Number of pages11
JournalTurkish Journal of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences
Volume26
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2018

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© TÜBITAK.

Keywords

  • Deep dependencies
  • Dependency parsing
  • Multiword expressions
  • Natural language processing
  • Treebanks
  • Turkish
  • Universal dependencies

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