ISCApad #212 |
Friday, February 05, 2016 by Chris Wellekens |
5-2-1 | ELRA - Language Resources Catalogue - Update (January 2016)
The Arboretum treebank is a morphologically and syntactically annotated repository of Danish sentences. It consists of about 425,000 tokens and there are ca. 22,260 sentences/utterances containing 3 or more tokens. Arboretum provides named entity categories for all proper nouns. It also contains subclass categorisation for the pronoun and adverb word classes The final version of the treebank consists of two independent versions, constituent trees and dependency trees, and is distributed in the following versions:
1. Native dependency format (Constraint Grammar format) 2. Dependency annotation converted to MALT xml format 3. Native constituent tree format (Cross-language VISL standard) 4. Constituent format converted to TIGER xml For more information, see: http://catalog.elra.info/product_info.php?products_id=1248 ROCO is a Romanian journalistic corpus containing approximately 7.1 million tokens, the number of types being 231,626. It is rich in proper names, numerals and named entities. The corpus has been lemmatized and PoS annotated following the Multext-East morphosyntactic specifications, and it is XML encoded.
For more information, see: http://catalog.elra.info/product_info.php?products_id=1249
The GlobalPhone Swahili corpus contains 7,728 utterances spoken by 70 speakers. Native speakers of Swahili were asked to read prompted sentences of newspaper articles. The entire collection took place in Nairobi, Kenya.
For more information, see: http://catalog.elra.info/product_info.php?products_id=1258 The GlobalPhone pronunciation dictionaries contain the pronunciations of all word forms found in the transcription data of the GlobalPhone speech & text database. The Swahili dictionary contains 10664 entries. For more information, see: http://catalog.elra.info/product_info.php?products_id=1259 The GlobalPhone Ukrainian corpus contains 12,814 utterances spoken by 119 speakers. Native speakers of Ukrainian were asked to read prompted sentences of newspaper articles. The entire collection took place in Donezk, Ukraine. For more information, see: http://catalog.elra.info/product_info.php?products_id=1260 The GlobalPhone pronunciation dictionaries contain the pronunciations of all word forms found in the transcription data of the GlobalPhone speech & text database. The Ukrainian dictionary contains 7748 entries/7740 words. For more information, see: http://catalog.elra.info/product_info.php?products_id=1261 ELRA-S0379 JV_TDM Corpus ISLRN: 371-240-320-910-4 This corpus provides a phonetic annotation of 37 chapters of the original French version of ?Around the World in 80 Days? by Jules Verne read by a single speaker. Each chapter has been annotated in a separate .TextGrid file. The total audio size is 6h 41mn 36s with 5h 2mn 41s of speech. The .TextGrid files contain several annotation tiers: phoneme, number of characters, syllable, transcription, PoS, paragraph break, sentence break, prosodic annotations, breathing pauses.
For more information, see: http://catalog.elra.info/product_info.php?products_id=1252 ROMBAC is a Romanian corpus containing equal shares of texts from 5 different genres: journalism, legalese, fiction, medicine and biographical data for Romanian literary personalities. The entire corpus counts around 41,000,000 words, including punctuation. The corpus is annotated at paragraph, sentence, constituent group and word levels, and it provides morpho-syntactic information (MSD). It is xml encoded. For more information, see: http://catalog.elra.info/product_info.php?products_id=1253 NPChunks is a training corpus containing approximately 1,000 sentences, with a total of 24,243 tokens, selected randomly from the written part of the CINTIL corpus. The corpus is PoS-annotated at token level, including punctuation. Noun Phrases were annotated with specific tags. It was automatically PoS-tagged with MBT tagger, and lemmatized with MBLEM, following the annotation scheme of the Corpus of Reference of Contemporary Portuguese. For more information, see: http://catalog.elra.info/product_info.php?products_id=1256 The Portuguese-English subpart of the EUROPARL Corpus was extracted from the proceedings of the European Parliament. It contains approximately 58,324,562 tokens of European Portuguese (L1) and 49,216,896 tokens of English (translation). It is composed of one text file for the English corpus and two files for the Portuguese version: a text file and an annotated file, containing a PoS tag and a lemma for each token. For more information, see: http://catalog.elra.info/product_info.php?products_id=1257 ELRA-L0096 MCL - Multifunctional Computational Lexicon of Contemporary Portuguese
MCL is a 26,443 lemma Frequency Lexicon with 140,315 tokens extracted from CORLEX, a contemporary Portuguese corpus (16,210,438 words). In order to extract the lexicon, all the different lexical forms occurring in the corpus were indexed and subsequently tagged morphosyntactically and lemmatised by PALAVROSO. Each lemma in MCL is followed by morphosyntactic and quantitative information.ISLRN: 489-956-642-755-8 For more information, see: http://catalog.elra.info/product_info.php?products_id=1254 LEX-MWE-PT is a lexicon of European Portuguese containing multiword expressions (MWE) extracted from a balanced 50.8M-word written corpus. The lexicon covers 1,198 lemmas (composed of single words from different PoS categories: nouns, adjectives, verbs and adverbs); 12,753 MWE lemmas (which include inflectional variants of the MWE lemmas); and 242,233 concordances of those MWE manually verified. For more information, see: http://catalog.elra.info/product_info.php?products_id=1255 For more information on the catalogue, please contact Valérie Mapelli mailto:mapelli@elda.org If you would like to enquire about having your resources distributed by ELRA, please do not hesitate to contact us. Visit the Universal Catalogue: http://universal.elra.info Archives of ELRA Language Resources Catalogue Updates: http://www.elra.info/en/catalogues/language-resources-announcements/
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5-2-2 | LDC Newsletter (January 2016) In this newsletter: CFP for LREC 2016 Novel Incentives Workshop LDC Membership Discounts for MY 2016 Still Available
New publications:
CFP for LREC 2016 Novel Incentives Workshop The first workshop on novel incentives in linguistic data collection will take place on May 28, 2016 in conjunction with the Tenth International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC2016) in Portoroz, Slovenia.
Novel Incentives for Collecting Linguistic Data and Annotation from People: types, implementation, tasking requirements, workflow and results, opens the discussion on incentives in data collection describing novel approaches and comparing traditional monetary incentives.
The workshop is accepting papers through February 6, 2016. For more information visit the workshop webpage.
LDC Membership Discounts for MY 2016 Still Available If you are considering joining LDC for Membership Year 2016 (MY2016), there is still time to save on membership fees. Any organization which joins or renews membership for 2016 through March 1, 2016, is entitled to a 5% discount on membership fees. Organizations which held membership for MY2015 can receive a 10% discount on fees provided they renew prior to March 1, 2016. Publications planned for release in 2016 include multilingual language packs, BOLT discussion forum and DEFT narrative text corpora, HAVIC video clips and transcripts and the latest Arabic and Chinese treebanks.
New publications (1) Arabic Treebank - Weblog was developed by LDC and consists of Arabic weblog data with part-of-speech, morphology, gloss and syntactic tree annotation. The ongoing Penn Arabic Treebank Project (PATB) supports research in Arabic-language natural language processing and human language technology development. Generally, the PATB consists of two distinct phases: (a) part-of-speech (POS) tagging, which divides the text into lexical tokens and gives relevant information about each token such as lexical category, inflectional features, and a gloss (referred to as POS for convenience, although it includes morphological and gloss information not traditionally included with part-of-speech annotation), and (b) Arabic treebanking, which characterizes the constituent structures of word sequences, provides categories for each non-terminal node, and identifies null elements, co-reference, traces and so on. The data contains 243,117 source tokens before clitics were split, and 308,996 tree tokens after clitics were separated for treebank annotation. The source material is weblogs collected by LDC from various sources. Arabic Treebank - Weblog is distributed via web download. 2016 Subscription Members will automatically receive two copies of this corpus. 2016 Standard Members may request a copy as part of their 16 free membership corpora. Non-members may license this data for US $4500. * (2) NewSoMe Corpus of Opinion in Blogs was compiled at Barcelona Media and consists of English and Spanish blogs annotated for opinions. It is part of the NewSoMe (News and Social Media) set of corpora presenting opinion annotations across several genres and covering multiple languages. NewSoMe is the result of an effort to build a unifying annotation framework for analyzing opinion in different genres, ranging from controlled text, such as news reports, to diverse types of user-generated content that includes blogs, product reviews and microblogs. LDC has also released NewSoMe Corpus of Opinion in News Reports (LDC2015T17). The data consists of 108 English documents and 191 Spanish documents. The annotation was carried out manually through the crowdsourcing platform CrowdFlower with seven annotations per layer that were aggregated for this data set. The layers annotated were topic, segment, cue, subjectivity, polarity and intensity. NewSoMe Corpus of Opinion in Blogs is distributed via web download. 2016 Subscription Members will automatically receive two copies of this corpus. 2016 Standard Members may request a copy as part of their 16 free membership corpora. Non-members may license this data for US $750. * (3) GALE Phase 4 Chinese Weblog Parallel Sentences was developed by LDC. Along with other corpora, the parallel text in this release comprised training data for Phase 4 of the DARPA GALE (Global Autonomous Language Exploitation) Program. This corpus contains Chinese source sentences and corresponding English translations selected from newsgroup and weblog data collected by LDC and translated by LDC or under its direction. GALE Phase 4 Chinese Weblog Parallel Sentences includes 231 source-translation document pairs, comprising 92,501 tokens of Chinese source text and its English translation. Sentences were selected for translation in two steps. First, files were chosen using sentence selection scripts provided by GALE program participants SRI International and IBM. The output was then manually reviewed by LDC staff to eliminate problematic sentences. Selected files were reformatted into a human-readable translation format and assigned to translation vendors. Translators followed LDC's Chinese to English translation guidelines and were provided with the full source documents containing the target sentences for their reference. Bilingual LDC staff performed quality control procedures on the completed translations. GALE Phase 4 Chinese Weblog Parallel Sentences is distributed via web download. 2016 Subscription Members will automatically receive two copies of this corpus. 2016 Standard Members may request a copy as part of their 16 free membership corpora. Non-members may license this data for US $1750.
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5-2-3 | Appen ButlerHill
Appen ButlerHill A global leader in linguistic technology solutions RECENT CATALOG ADDITIONS—MARCH 2012 1. Speech Databases 1.1 Telephony
2. Pronunciation Lexica Appen Butler Hill has considerable experience in providing a variety of lexicon types. These include: Pronunciation Lexica providing phonemic representation, syllabification, and stress (primary and secondary as appropriate) Part-of-speech tagged Lexica providing grammatical and semantic labels Other reference text based materials including spelling/mis-spelling lists, spell-check dictionar-ies, mappings of colloquial language to standard forms, orthographic normalization lists. Over a period of 15 years, Appen Butler Hill has generated a significant volume of licensable material for a wide range of languages. For holdings information in a given language or to discuss any customized development efforts, please contact: sales@appenbutlerhill.com
4. Other Language Resources Morphological Analyzers – Farsi/Persian & Urdu Arabic Thesaurus Language Analysis Documentation – multiple languages
For additional information on these resources, please contact: sales@appenbutlerhill.com 5. Customized Requests and Package Configurations Appen Butler Hill is committed to providing a low risk, high quality, reliable solution and has worked in 130+ languages to-date supporting both large global corporations and Government organizations. We would be glad to discuss to any customized requests or package configurations and prepare a cus-tomized proposal to meet your needs.
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5-2-4 | OFROM 1er corpus de français de Suisse romande Nous souhaiterions vous signaler la mise en ligne d'OFROM, premier corpus de français parlé en Suisse romande. L'archive est, dans version actuelle, d'une durée d'environ 15 heures. Elle est transcrite en orthographe standard dans le logiciel Praat. Un concordancier permet d'y effectuer des recherches, et de télécharger les extraits sonores associés aux transcriptions.
Pour accéder aux données et consulter une description plus complète du corpus, nous vous invitons à vous rendre à l'adresse suivante : http://www.unine.ch/ofrom.
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5-2-5 | Real-world 16-channel noise recordings We are happy to announce the release of DEMAND, a set of real-world
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5-2-6 | Aide à la finalisation de corpus oraux ou multimodaux pour diffusion, valorisation et dépôt pérenne Aide à la finalisation de corpus oraux ou multimodaux pour diffusion, valorisation et dépôt pérenne
Le consortium IRCOM de la TGIR Corpus et l’EquipEx ORTOLANG s’associent pour proposer une aide technique et financière à la finalisation de corpus de données orales ou multimodales à des fins de diffusion et pérennisation par l’intermédiaire de l’EquipEx ORTOLANG. Cet appel ne concerne pas la création de nouveaux corpus mais la finalisation de corpus existants et non-disponibles de manière électronique. Par finalisation, nous entendons le dépôt auprès d’un entrepôt numérique public, et l’entrée dans un circuit d’archivage pérenne. De cette façon, les données de parole qui ont été enrichies par vos recherches vont pouvoir être réutilisées, citées et enrichies à leur tour de manière cumulative pour permettre le développement de nouvelles connaissances, selon les conditions d’utilisation que vous choisirez (sélection de licences d’utilisation correspondant à chacun des corpus déposés).
Cet appel d’offre est soumis à plusieurs conditions (voir ci-dessous) et l’aide financière par projet est limitée à 3000 euros. Les demandes seront traitées dans l’ordre où elles seront reçues par l’ IRCOM. Les demandes émanant d’EA ou de petites équipes ne disposant pas de support technique « corpus » seront traitées prioritairement. Les demandes sont à déposer du 1er septembre 2013 au 31 octobre 2013. La décision de financement relèvera du comité de pilotage d’IRCOM. Les demandes non traitées en 2013 sont susceptibles de l’être en 2014. Si vous avez des doutes quant à l’éligibilité de votre projet, n’hésitez pas à nous contacter pour que nous puissions étudier votre demande et adapter nos offres futures.
Pour palier la grande disparité dans les niveaux de compétences informatiques des personnes et groupes de travail produisant des corpus, L’ IRCOM propose une aide personnalisée à la finalisation de corpus. Celle-ci sera réalisée par un ingénieur IRCOM en fonction des demandes formulées et adaptées aux types de besoin, qu’ils soient techniques ou financiers.
Les conditions nécessaires pour proposer un corpus à finaliser et obtenir une aide d’IRCOM sont :
Les demandes peuvent concerner tout type de traitement : traitements de corpus quasi-finalisés (conversion, anonymisation), alignement de corpus déjà transcrits, conversion depuis des formats « traitement de textes », digitalisation de support ancien. Pour toute demande exigeant une intervention manuelle importante, les demandeurs devront s’investir en moyens humains ou financiers à la hauteur des moyens fournis par IRCOM et ORTOLANG.
IRCOM est conscient du caractère exceptionnel et exploratoire de cette démarche. Il convient également de rappeler que ce financement est réservé aux corpus déjà largement constitués et ne peuvent intervenir sur des créations ex-nihilo. Pour ces raisons de limitation de moyens, les propositions de corpus les plus avancés dans leur réalisation pourront être traitées en priorité, en accord avec le CP d’IRCOM. Il n’y a toutefois pas de limite « théorique » aux demandes pouvant être faites, IRCOM ayant la possibilité de rediriger les demandes qui ne relèvent pas de ses compétences vers d’autres interlocuteurs.
Les propositions de réponse à cet appel d’offre sont à envoyer à ircom.appel.corpus@gmail.com. Les propositions doivent utiliser le formulaire de deux pages figurant ci-dessous. Dans tous les cas, une réponse personnalisée sera renvoyée par IRCOM.
Ces propositions doivent présenter les corpus proposés, les données sur les droits d’utilisation et de propriétés et sur la nature des formats ou support utilisés.
Cet appel est organisé sous la responsabilité d’IRCOM avec la participation financière conjointe de IRCOM et l’EquipEx ORTOLANG.
Pour toute information complémentaire, nous rappelons que le site web de l'Ircom (http://ircom.corpus-ir.fr) est ouvert et propose des ressources à la communauté : glossaire, inventaire des unités et des corpus, ressources logicielles (tutoriaux, comparatifs, outils de conversion), activités des groupes de travail, actualités des formations, ... L'IRCOM invite les unités à inventorier leur corpus oraux et multimodaux - 70 projets déjà recensés - pour avoir une meilleure visibilité des ressources déjà disponibles même si elles ne sont pas toutes finalisées.
Le comité de pilotage IRCOM
Utiliser ce formulaire pour répondre à l’appel : Merci.
Réponse à l’appel à la finalisation de corpus oral ou multimodal
Nom du corpus :
Nom de la personne à contacter : Adresse email : Numéro de téléphone :
Nature des données de corpus :
Existe-t’il des enregistrements : Quel média ? Audio, vidéo, autre… Quelle est la longueur totale des enregistrements ? Nombre de cassettes, nombre d’heures, etc. Quel type de support ? Quel format (si connu) ?
Existe-t’il des transcriptions : Quel format ? (papier, traitement de texte, logiciel de transcription) Quelle quantité (en heures, nombre de mots, ou nombre de transcriptions) ?
Disposez vous de métadonnées (présentation des droits d’auteurs et d’usage) ?
Disposez-vous d’une description précise des personnes enregistrées ?
Disposez-vous d’une attestation de consentement éclairé pour les personnes ayant été enregistrées ? En quelle année (environ) les enregistrements ont eu lieu ?
Quelle est la langue des enregistrements ?
Le corpus comprend-il des enregistrements d’enfants ou de personnes ayant un trouble du langage ou une pathologie ? Si oui, de quelle population s’agit-il ?
Dans un souci d’efficacité et pour vous conseiller dans les meilleurs délais, il nous faut disposer d’exemples des transcriptions ou des enregistrements en votre possession. Nous vous contacterons à ce sujet, mais vous pouvez d’ores et déjà nous adresser par courrier électronique un exemple des données dont vous disposez (transcriptions, métadonnées, adresse de page web contenant les enregistrements).
Nous vous remercions par avance de l’intérêt que vous porterez à notre proposition. Pour toutes informations complémentaires veuillez contacter Martine Toda martine.toda@ling.cnrs.fr ou à ircom.appel.corpus@gmail.com.
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5-2-7 | Rhapsodie: un Treebank prosodique et syntaxique de français parlé Rhapsodie: un Treebank prosodique et syntaxique de français parlé
Nous avons le plaisir d'annoncer que la ressource Rhapsodie, Corpus de français parlé annoté pour la prosodie et la syntaxe, est désormais disponible sur http://www.projet-rhapsodie.fr/
Le treebank Rhapsodie est composé de 57 échantillons sonores (5 minutes en moyenne, au total 3h de parole, 33000 mots) dotés d’une transcription orthographique et phonétique alignées au son.
Il s'agit d’une ressource de français parlé multi genres (parole privée et publique ; monologues et dialogues ; entretiens en face à face vs radiodiffusion, parole plus ou moins interactive et plus ou moins planifiée, séquences descriptives, argumentatives, oratoires et procédurales) articulée autour de sources externes (enregistrements extraits de projets antérieurs, en accord avec les concepteurs initiaux) et internes. Nous tenons en particulier à remercier les responsables des projets CFPP2000, PFC, ESLO, C-Prom ainsi que Mathieu Avanzi, Anne Lacheret, Piet Mertens et Nicolas Obin.
Les échantillons sonores (wave & MP3, pitch nettoyé et lissé), les transcriptions orthographiques (txt), les annotations macrosyntaxiques (txt), les annotations prosodiques (xml, textgrid) ainsi que les metadonnées (xml & html) sont téléchargeables librement selon les termes de la licence Creative Commons Attribution - Pas d’utilisation commerciale - Partage dans les mêmes conditions 3.0 France. Les annotations microsyntaxiques seront disponibles prochainement Les métadonnées sont également explorables en ligne grâce à un browser. Les tutoriels pour la transcription, les annotations et les requêtes sont disponibles sur le site Rhapsodie. Enfin, L’annotation prosodique est interrogeable en ligne grâce au langage de requêtes Rhapsodie QL. L'équipe Ressource Rhapsodie (Modyco, Université Paris Ouest Nanterre) Sylvain Kahane, Anne Lacheret, Paola Pietrandrea, Atanas Tchobanov, Arthur Truong. Partenaires : IRCAM (Paris), LATTICE (Paris), LPL (Aix-en-Provence), CLLE-ERSS (Toulouse).
******************************************************** Rhapsodie: a Prosodic and Syntactic Treebank for Spoken French We are pleased to announce that Rhapsodie, a syntactic and prosodic treebank of spoken French created with the aim of modeling the interface between prosody, syntax and discourse in spoken French is now available at http://www.projet-rhapsodie.fr/ The Rhapsodie treebank is made up of 57 short samples of spoken French (5 minutes long on average, amounting to 3 hours of speech and a 33 000 word corpus) endowed with an orthographical phoneme-aligned transcription . The corpus is representative of different genres (private and public speech; monologues and dialogues; face-to-face interviews and broadcasts; more or less interactive discourse; descriptive, argumentative and procedural samples, variations in planning type). The corpus samples have been mainly drawn from existing corpora of spoken French and partially created within the frame of theRhapsodie project. We would especially like to thank the coordinators of the CFPP2000, PFC, ESLO, C-Prom projects as well as Piet Mertens, Mathieu Avanzi, Anne Lacheret and Nicolas Obin. The sound samples (waves, MP3, cleaned and stylized pitch), the orthographic transcriptions (txt), the macrosyntactic annotations (txt), the prosodic annotations (xml, textgrid) as well as the metadata (xml and html) can be freely downloaded under the terms of the Creative Commons licence Attribution - Noncommercial - Share Alike 3.0 France. Microsyntactic annotation will be available soon. The metadata are searchable on line through a browser. The prosodic annotation can be explored on line through the Rhapsodie Query Language. The tutorials of transcription, annotations and Rhapsodie Query Language are available on the site.
The Rhapsodie team (Modyco, Université Paris Ouest Nanterre : Sylvain Kahane, Anne Lacheret, Paola Pietrandrea, Atanas Tchobanov, Arthur Truong. Partners: IRCAM (Paris), LATTICE (Paris), LPL (Aix-en-Provence),CLLE-ERSS (Toulouse).
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5-2-8 | Annotation of “Hannah and her sisters” by Woody Allen. We have created and made publicly available a dense audio-visual person-oriented ground-truth annotation of a feature movie (100 minutes long): “Hannah and her sisters” by Woody Allen. Jean-Ronan Vigouroux, Louis Chevallier Patrick Pérez Technicolor Research & Innovation
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5-2-9 | French TTS Text to Speech Synthesis:
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5-2-10 | Google 's Language Model benchmark A LM benchmark is available at:https://github.com/ciprian-chelba/1-billion-word-language-modeling-benchmark
Here is a brief description of the project.
'The purpose of the project is to make available a standard training and test setup for language modeling experiments. The training/held-out data was produced from a download at statmt.org using a combination of Bash shell and Perl scripts distributed here. This also means that your results on this data set are reproducible by the research community at large. Besides the scripts needed to rebuild the training/held-out data, it also makes available log-probability values for each word in each of ten held-out data sets, for each of the following baseline models:
ArXiv paper: http://arxiv.org/abs/1312.3005
Happy benchmarking!'
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5-2-11 | International Standard Language Resource Number (ISLRN) (ELRA Press release) Press Release - Immediate - Paris, France, December 13, 2013 Establishing the International Standard Language Resource Number (ISLRN) 12 major NLP organisations announce the establishment of the ISLRN, a Persistent Unique Identifier, to be assigned to each Language Resource. On November 18, 2013, 12 NLP organisations have agreed to announce the establishment of the International Standard Language Resource Number (ISLRN), a Persistent Unique Identifier, to be assigned to each Language Resource. Experiment replicability, an essential feature of scientific work, would be enhanced by such unique identifier. Set up by ELRA, LDC and AFNLP/Oriental-COCOSDA, the ISLRN Portal will provide unique identifiers using a standardised nomenclature, as a service free of charge for all Language Resource providers. It will be supervised by a steering committee composed of representatives of participating organisations and enlarged whenever necessary. More information on ELRA and the ISLRN, please contact: Khalid Choukri choukri@elda.org More information on ELDA, please contact: Hélène Mazo mazo@elda.org ELRA 55-57, rue Brillat Savarin 75013 Paris (France) Tel.: +33 1 43 13 33 33 Fax: +33 1 43 13 33 30
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5-2-12 | ISLRN new portal Opening of the ISLRN Portal
ELRA, LDC, and AFNLP/Oriental-COCOSDA announce the opening of the ISLRN Portal @ www.islrn.org.
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5-2-13 | Speechocean – update (February 2016)
Speechocean – update (Feb 2016):
Speechocean: A global language resources and data services supplier
About Speechocean
Speechocean is one of the world well-known language related resources & services provider in the fields of Human Computer Interaction and Human Language Technology. At present, we can provide data services with 110+ languages and dialects across the world.
KingLine Data Center ---Data Sharing Platform
Kingline Data Center is operated and supervised by Speechocean, which is mainly focused on language resources creating and providing for research and development of human language technology.
These diversified corpora are widely used for the research and development in the fields of Speech Recognition, Speech Synthesis, Natural Language Processing, Machine Translation, Web Search, etc. All corpora are openly accessible for users all over the world, including users from scientific research institutions, enterprises or individuals.
For more detailed information, please visit our website: http://kingline.speechocean.com
New released corpora:
ID: King-ASR-358
This database collection is an in-vehicle 4-channel Chinese speech database collected and owned by Beijing Haitian Ruisheng Science Technology Ltd.
400 speakers were recorded in total, and each speaker recorded 1 session in four different environments. 220 utterances were recorded for each speaker, and with discarding some unqualified utterances, the whole corpus contains the recordings of 351,820 utterances of Chinese Mandarin speech data which were from all the speakers. For the whole corpus, the pure recording time is about 307 hours (4 channels), including the leading and trailing silence (about 500ms). The total size of this database is about 32.9G.
ID: King-ASR-218
This is a 3-channel British English mobile speech database, which is collected over three mobile phone simultaneously (android mobiles, iPhone and windows phones) in Britain. This database is owned by of Beijing Haitian Ruisheng Science Technology Ltd (SpeechOcean, www.speechocean.com) and performed in a quiet environment. The corpus contains the 212 speakers of spontaneous dialog speech. The pure recording time is about 105 hours (1-Channel). 30 topics were contained in this database. The total size of this database is 37.6G.
A pronunciation lexicon with a phonemic transcription in OALD as appendix was carefully generated by covering all the words in the transcription files.
ID: King-ASR-269
This database collection is a Japanese speech database collected by Beijing Haitian Ruisheng Science Technology Ltd. (SpeechOcean, www.speechocean.com) over Android mobile phone. 2562 speakers were recorded in total, each speaker recorded 320 sentences. The whole corpus contains the recordings of 819,029 utterances of Japanese speech data which were from all the speakers. For the whole corpus, the pure recording time is about 940 hours, including the leading and trailing silence. The total size of this database is about 100G.
A pronunciation lexicon with a phonemic transcription in Hepburn was carefully made by covering all the words in the transcription files. All the data was transcribed and labeled.
Contact Information
Xianfeng Cheng
VP
Tel: +86-10-62660928; +86-10-62660053 ext.8080
Mobile: +86 13681432590
Skype: xianfeng.cheng1
Email: chengxianfeng@speechocean.com; cxfxy0cxfxy0@gmail.com
Website: www.speechocean.com
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5-2-14 | kidLUCID: London UCL Children’s Clear Speech in Interaction Database kidLUCID: London UCL Children’s Clear Speech in Interaction Database We are delighted to announce the availability of a new corpus of spontaneous speech for children aged 9 to 14 years inclusive, produced as part of the ESRC-funded project on ‘Speaker-controlled Variability in Children's Speech in Interaction’ (PI: Valerie Hazan). Speech recordings (a total of 288 conversations) are available for 96 child participants (46M, 50F, range 9;0 to 15;0 years), all native southern British English speakers. Participants were recorded in pairs while completing the diapix spot-the-difference picture task in which the pair verbally compared two scenes, only one of which was visible to each talker. High-quality digital recordings were made in sound-treated rooms. For each conversation, a stereo audio recording is provided with each speaker on a separate channel together with a Praat Textgrid containing separate word- and phoneme-level segmentations for each speaker. There are six recordings per speaker pair made in the following conditions:
The kidLUCID corpus is available online within the OSCAAR (Online Speech/Corpora Archive and Analysis Resource) archive (https://oscaar.ci.northwestern.edu/). Free access can be requested for research purposes. Further information about the project can be found at: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/pals/research/shaps/research/shaps/research/clear-speech-strategies This work was supported by Economic and Social Research Council Grant No. RES-062- 23-3106.
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5-2-15 | Robust speech datasets and ASR software tools
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5-2-16 | International Standard Language Resource Number (ISLRN) implemented by ELRA and LDC ELRA and LDC partner to implement ISLRN process and assign identifiers to all the Language Resources in their catalogues.
Following the meeting of the largest NLP organizations, the NLP12, and their endorsement of the International Standard Language Resource Number (ISLRN), ELRA and LDC partnered to implement the ISLRN process and to assign identifiers to all the Language Resources (LRs) in their catalogues. The ISLRN web portal was designed to enable the assignment of unique identifiers as a service free of charge for all Language Resource providers. To enhance the use of ISLRN, ELRA and LDC have collaborated to provide the ISLRN 13-digit ID to all the Language Resources distributed in their respective catalogues. Anyone who is searching the ELRA and LDC catalogues can see that each Language Resource is now identified by both the data centre ID and the ISLRN number. All providers and users of such LRs should refer to the latter in their own publications and whenever referring to the LR.
ELRA and LDC will continue their joint involvement in ISLRN through active participation in this web service.
Visit the ELRA and LDC catalogues, respectively at http://catalogue.elra.info and https://catalog.ldc.upenn.edu
Background The International Standard Language Resource Number (ISLRN) aims to provide unique identifiers using a standardised nomenclature, thus ensuring that LRs are correctly identified, and consequently, recognised with proper references for their usage in applications within R&D projects, product evaluation and benchmarking, as well as in documents and scientific papers. Moreover, this is a major step in the networked and shared world that Human Language Technologies (HLT) has become: unique resources must be identified as such and meta-catalogues need a common identification format to manage data correctly.
***About NLP12*** Representatives of the major Natural Language Processing and Computational Linguistics organizations met in Paris on 18 November 2013 to harmonize and coordinate their activities within the field.
*** About ELRA *** The Linguistic Data Consortium (LDC) is an open consortium of universities, libraries, corporations and research laboratories that creates and distributes linguistic resources for language-related education, research and technology development. To find out more about LDC, please visit our web site: https://www.ldc.upenn.edu
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5-2-17 | Base de données LIBRE et GRATUITE pour la reconnaissance du locuteur Je me permet de vous solliciter pour contribuer à la création
d?une base de données LIBRE et GRATUITE
pour la reconnaissance du locuteur.
Plus de détails et la marche à suivre ci-dessous.
Merci beaucoup,
Anthony Larcher
Récemment, un certain nombre de laboratoires spécialisés dans la reconnaissance du locuteur dépendante du texte ont initié le projet RedDots.
Il s?agit d?une initiative volontaire sur financement propre des laboratoires.
Ce projet encourage des discussions sur les thèmes de la reconnaissance du locuteur,
la collection de corpus et les cas d?usage propres à cette technologie à travers un Google Group.
Dans le cadre du projet RedDots, l?Institute for Infocomm Research (Singapour) a développé une application Android
qui permet d?enregistrer des données sur un téléphone portable.
Cette base de données a pour but de pallier certaines lacunes des corpus existants:
- le coût (certaines bases standard sont vendues à plusieurs milliers d?euro)
- la taille limitée (le nombre limité de locuteurs ne permet plus d?évaluer les systèmes de reconnaissance de manière significative)
- la variabilité limitée (les données sont actuellement enregistrées dans plus de 5 pays dans le monde entier)
Afin de distributer une base de données, qui puisse bénéficier librement
à l?ensemble de la communauté de recherche nous vous sollicitons.
Comment faire et en combien de temps?
- inscrivez vous en 2 minutes à l?adresse suivante
- installez l?application Android sur votre téléphone en 2 minutes, saisissez l'ID et mot de passe qui vous seront envoyé par email
- enregistrez une session 3 minutes sur votre téléphone
Tout se fait en moins de 10 minutes?
Une des limitations principale des corpus existant est le nombre limité de sessions
enregistrée par locuteur et le court intervalle de temps au cours duquel ces sessions sont enregistrées.
Afin de combler ce manque nous espérons que chaque participant acceptera d?enregistrer
plusieurs sessions dans les mois à venir.
Idealement, chaque participant enregistrera 3 ou 4 minutes par semaine pendant un an.
Ou vont mes données et pour quoi sont elles utilisées?
Les données sont actuellement envoyées sur un serveur de l?Institute for Infocomm Research
à Singapour. Un institut de recherche public.
En vous enregistrant, vous acceptez que ces données soient utilisées à des fins de recherche
uniquement. ces données seront mise à disposition en ligne gratuitement tout au long du projet.
Merci pour votre contribution, n?hésitez pas à faire circuler cet email.
Plus de détails seront données prochainement dans un article soumis à INTERSPEECH 2015.
Anthony Larcher
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5-2-18 | ISLRN adopted by Joint Research Center (JRC) of the European Commission JRC, the EC's Joint Research Centre, an important LR player: First to adopt the ISLRN initiative
The Joint Research Centre (JRC), the European Commission's in house science service, is the first organisation to use the International Standard Language Resource Number (ISLRN) initiative and has requested ISLRN 13-digit unique identifiers to its Language Resources (LR).
The current JRC LRs (downloadable from https://ec.europa.eu/jrc/en/language-technologies) with an ISLRN ID are:
Background The International Standard Language Resource Number (ISLRN) aims to provide unique identifiers using a standardised nomenclature, thus ensuring that LRs are correctly identified, and consequently, recognised with proper references for their usage in applications within R&D projects, product evaluation and benchmarking, as well as in documents and scientific papers. Moreover, this is a major step in the networked and shared world that Human Language Technologies (HLT) has become: unique resources must be identified as such and meta-catalogues need a common identification format to manage data correctly.
*** About the JRC *** As the Commission's in-house science service, the Joint Research Centre's mission is to provide EU policies with independent, evidence-based scientific and technical support throughout the whole policy cycle.
*** About ELRA ***
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5-2-19 | Forensic database of voice recordings of 500+ Australian English speakers Forensic database of voice recordings of 500+ Australian English speakers
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5-2-20 | Audio and Electroglottographic speech recordings
Audio and Electroglottographic speech recordings from several languages We are happy to announce the public availability of speech recordings made as part of the UCLA project 'Production and Perception of Linguistic Voice Quality'. http://www.phonetics.ucla.edu/voiceproject/voice.html Audio and EGG recordings are available for Bo, Gujarati, Hmong, Mandarin, Black Miao, Southern Yi, Santiago Matatlan/ San Juan Guelavia Zapotec; audio recordings (no EGG) are available for English and Mandarin. Recordings of Jalapa Mazatec extracted from the UCLA Phonetic Archive are also posted. All recordings are accompanied by explanatory notes and wordlists, and most are accompanied by Praat textgrids that locate target segments of interest to our project. Analysis software developed as part of the project – VoiceSauce for audio analysis and EggWorks for EGG analysis – and all project publications are also available from this site. All preliminary analyses of the recordings using these tools (i.e. acoustic and EGG parameter values extracted from the recordings) are posted on the site in large data spreadsheets. All of these materials are made freely available under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike-3.0 Unported License. This project was funded by NSF grant BCS-0720304 to Pat Keating, Abeer Alwan and Jody Kreiman of UCLA, and Christina Esposito of Macalester College. Pat Keating (UCLA)
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5-2-21 | Press release: Opening of the ELRA License Wizard Press Release - Immediate - Paris, France, April 2, 2015
Currently, the License Wizard allows the user to choose among several licenses that exist for the use of Language Resources: ELRA, Creative Commons and META-SHARE.
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5-2-22 | EEG-face tracking- audio 24 GB data set Kara One, Toronto, Canada We are making 24 GB of a new dataset, called Kara One, freely available. This database combines 3 modalities (EEG, face tracking, and audio) during imagined and articulated speech using phonologically-relevant phonemic and single-word prompts. It is the result of a collaboration between the Toronto Rehabilitation Institute (in the University Health Network) and the Department of Computer Science at the University of Toronto.
In the associated paper (abstract below), we show how to accurately classify imagined phonological categories solely from EEG data. Specifically, we obtain up to 90% accuracy in classifying imagined consonants from imagined vowels and up to 95% accuracy in classifying stimulus from active imagination states using advanced deep-belief networks.
Data from 14 participants are available here: http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~complingweb/data/karaOne/karaOne.html.
If you have any questions, please contact Frank Rudzicz at frank@cs.toronto.edu.
Best regards, Frank
PAPER Shunan Zhao and Frank Rudzicz (2015) Classifying phonological categories in imagined and articulated speech. In Proceedings of ICASSP 2015, Brisbane Australia ABSTRACT This paper presents a new dataset combining 3 modalities (EEG, facial, and audio) during imagined and vocalized phonemic and single-word prompts. We pre-process the EEG data, compute features for all 3 modalities, and perform binary classi?cation of phonological categories using a combination of these modalities. For example, a deep-belief network obtains accuracies over 90% on identifying consonants, which is signi?cantly more accurate than two baseline supportvectormachines. Wealsoclassifybetweenthedifferent states (resting, stimuli, active thinking) of the recording, achievingaccuraciesof95%. Thesedatamaybeusedtolearn multimodal relationships, and to develop silent-speech and brain-computer interfaces.
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5-2-23 | TORGO data base free for academic use. In the spirit of the season, I would like to announce the immediate availability of the TORGO database free, in perpetuity for academic use. This database combines acoustics and electromagnetic articulography from 8 individuals with speech disorders and 7 without, and totals over 18 GB. These data can be used for multimodal models (e.g., for acoustic-articulatory inversion), models of pathology, and augmented speech recognition, for example. More information (and the database itself) can be found here: http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~complingweb/data/TORGO/torgo.html.
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5-2-24 | Datatang Datatang is a global leading data provider that specialized in data customized solution, focusing in variety speech, image, and text data collection, annotation, crowdsourcing services.
1, Speech data collection 2, Speech data synthesis 3, Speech data transcription I’ve attached our company introduction as reference, as well as available speech data lists as follows:
If you find any particular interested datasets, we could provide you samples with costs too.
Regards
Runze Zhao Oversea Sales Manager | Datatang Technology China M: +86 185 1698 2583 18 Zhongguancun St. Kemao Building Tower B 18F Beijing 100190
US M: +1 617 763 4722 640 W California Ave, Suite 210 Sunnyvale, CA 94086
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