OLAC Record
oai:www.ldc.upenn.edu:LDC2009T15

Metadata
Title:GALE Phase 1 Chinese Newsgroup Parallel Text - Part 1
Access Rights:Licensing Instructions for Subscription & Standard Members, and Non-Members: http://www.ldc.upenn.edu/language-resources/data/obtaining
Bibliographic Citation:Ma, Xiaoyi, and Stephanie Strassel. GALE Phase 1 Chinese Newsgroup Parallel Text - Part 1 LDC2009T15. Web Download. Philadelphia: Linguistic Data Consortium, 2009
Contributor:Ma, Xiaoyi
Strassel, Stephanie
Date (W3CDTF):2009
Date Issued (W3CDTF):2009-06-18
Description:*Introduction* GALE Phase 1 Chinese Newsgroup Parallel Text - Part 1 was prepared by LDC and contains 240,000 characters (112 files) of Chinese newsgroup text and its translation selected from twenty-five sources. Newsgroups consist of posts to electronic bulletin boards, Usenet newsgroups, discussion groups and similar forums. This release was used as training data in Phase 1 (year 1) of the DARPA-funded GALE program. . *Source Data* Preparating the source data involved four stages of work: data scouting, data harvesting, formating, and data selection. Data scouting involved manually searching the web for suitable newsgroup text. Data scouts were assigned particular topics and genres along with a production target in order to focus their web search. Formal annotation guidelines and a customized annotation toolkit helped data scouts to manage the search process and to track progress. Data scouts logged their decisions about potential text of interest (sites, threads and posts) to a database. A nightly process queried the annotation database and harvested all designated URLs. Whenever possible, the entire site was downloaded, not just the individual thread or post located by the data scout. Once the text was downloaded, its format was standardized (by running various scripts) so that the data could be more easily integrated into downstream annotation processes. Original-format versions of each document were also preserved. Typically, a new script was required for each new domain name that was identified. After scripts were run, an optional manual process corrected any remaining formatting problems. The selected documents were then reviewed for content-suitability using a semi-automatic process. A statistical approach was used to rank a document's relevance to a set of already-selected documents labeled as "good." An annotator then reviewed the list of relevance-ranked documents and selected those which were suitable for a particular annotation task or for annotation in general. These newly-judged documents in turn provided additional input for the generation of new ranked lists. Manual sentence unit/segment (SU) annotation.was also performed on a subset of files following LDC's Quick Rich Transcription specification. Three types of end of sentence SU were identified: statement SU, question SU and incomplete SU. *Translation* After files were selected, they were reformatted into a human-readable translation format, and the files were then assigned to professional translators for careful translation. Translators followed GALE Translation guidelines which describe the makeup of the translation team, the source data format, the translation data format, best practices for translating certain linguistic features (such as names and speech disfluencies), and quality control procedures applied to completed translations. TDF Format All final data are in Tab Delimited Format (TDF). TDF is compatible with other transcription formats, such as the Transcriber format and AG format, and it is easy to process. Each line of a TDF file corresponds to a speech segment and contains 13 tab delimited fields: field data_type 1 file unicode 2 channel int 3 start float 4 end float 5 speaker unicode 6 speakerType unicode 7 speakerDialect unicode 8 transcript unicode 9 section int 10 turn int 11 segment int 12 sectionType unicode 13 suType unicode A source TDF file and its translation are the same except that the transcript in the source TDF is replaced by its English translation. Some fields are inapplicable to newsgroup text. Those include the channel, start time, end time and speaker dialect fields. These fields are either empty or contain values as a placeholder. Encoding All data are encoded in UTF8. *Sponsorship * This work was supported in part by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, GALE Program Grant No. HR0011-06-1-0003. The content of this publication does not necessarily reflect the position or the policy of the Government, and no official endorsement should be inferred. *Samples* * Source * Translation
Extent:Corpus size: 3450 KB
Identifier:LDC2009T15
https://catalog.ldc.upenn.edu/LDC2009T15
ISBN: 1-58563-517-0
ISLRN: 219-593-002-727-9
DOI: 10.35111/zj66-b293
Language:English
Mandarin Chinese
Chinese
Language (ISO639):eng
cmn
zho
License:LDC User Agreement for Non-Members: https://catalog.ldc.upenn.edu/license/ldc-non-members-agreement.pdf
Medium:Distribution: Web Download
Publisher:Linguistic Data Consortium
Publisher (URI):https://www.ldc.upenn.edu
Relation (URI):https://catalog.ldc.upenn.edu/docs/LDC2009T15
Rights Holder:Portions © 2005-2007, 2009 Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania
Type (DCMI):Text
Type (OLAC):primary_text

OLAC Info

Archive:  The LDC Corpus Catalog
Description:  http://www.language-archives.org/archive/www.ldc.upenn.edu
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OAI Info

OaiIdentifier:  oai:www.ldc.upenn.edu:LDC2009T15
DateStamp:  2020-11-30
GetRecord:  OAI-PMH request for simple DC format

Search Info

Citation: Ma, Xiaoyi; Strassel, Stephanie. 2009. Linguistic Data Consortium.
Terms: area_Asia area_Europe country_CN country_GB dcmi_Text iso639_cmn iso639_eng iso639_zho olac_primary_text


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