Dravidian-CodeMix-FIRE 2021: Sentiment Analysis and Offensive Language Identification for Dravidian Languages in Code-Mixed Text-FIRE 2021 Virtual Event Madurai, India, December 13-17, 2021 |
Conference website | https://dravidian-codemix.github.io/2021/index.html |
Submission link | https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=dravidiancodemixfire |
Submission deadline | August 31, 2021 |
Sentiment analysis is the task of identifying subjective opinions or responses about a given topic. It has been an active area of research in the past two decades in both academia and industry. There is an increasing demand for sentiment analysis on social media texts which are largely code-mixed. Code-mixing is a prevalent phenomenon in a multilingual community where the code-mixed texts are sometimes written in non-native scripts. Systems trained on monolingual data fail on code-mixed data due to the complexity of code-switching at different linguistic levels in the text. This shared task presents a new gold standard corpus for sentiment analysis of code-mixed text in Dravidian languages (Malayalam-English and Tamil-English).
Offensive language identification is classification task in natural language processing (NLP) where the aim is to moderate and minimise offensive content in social media. It has been an active area of research in both academia and industry for the past two decades. There is an increasing demand for offensive language identification on social media texts which are largely code-mixed. Code-mixing is a prevalent phenomenon in a multilingual community and the code-mixed texts are sometimes written in non-native scripts. Systems trained on monolingual data fail on code-mixed data due to the complexity of code-switching at different linguistic levels in the text. This shared task presents a new gold standard corpus for offensive language identification of code-mixed text in Dravidian languages (Tamil-English and Malayalam-English).
Tamil language is spoken by Tamil people in India, Sri Lanka and by the Tamil diaspora around the world, with official recognition in India, Sri Lanka and Singapore. Kannada and Malayalam are a Dravidian language spoken predominantly by the people of Karnataka, and Kerala, India. The Tamil script evolved from the Tamili script, Vatteluttu alphabet, and Chola-Pallava script. It has 12 vowels, 18 consonants, and 1 āytam (voiceless velar fricative). Minority languages such as Saurashtra, Badaga, Irula, and Paniya are also written in the Tamil script. Tamil scripts are explained in Tolkappiyam (dating 5,320 BCE) as Eluttu" means "sound, letter, phoneme", and this covers the sounds of the Tamil language, how they are produced (phonology). It includes punarcci (lit. "joining, copulation") which is combination of sounds, orthography, graphemic and phonetics with sounds as they are produced and listened to. Both Kannada and Malayalam scripts are alpha-syllabic, belonging to a family of abugida writing systems that is partially alphabetic and partially syllable-based. However, social media users often mix Roman script for typing because it is easy to input. Hence, the majority of the data available in social media for these under-resourced languages are code-mixed.
The goal of this task is to identify sentiment polarity of the code-mixed dataset of comments/posts in Dravidian Languages (Malayalam-English and Tamil-English) collected from social media. The comment/post may contain more than one sentence but the average sentence length of the corpora is 1. Each comment/post is annotated with sentiment polarity at the comment/post level. This dataset also has class imbalance problems depicting real-world scenarios. Our proposal aims to encourage research that will reveal how sentiment is expressed in code-mixed scenarios on social media.
The participants will be provided development, training and test dataset.
Submission Guidelines
The paper (Sentiment Analysis for Davidian Languages in Code-Mixed Text) name format should be: TEAM_NAME@Dravidian-CodeMix-FIRE2021: Title of the paper. For example: NUIG_ULD@Dravidian-CodeMix-FIRE2021: Sentiment Analysis on Multilingual Code Mixing Text.
The paper (Offensive Language Identification for Davidian Languages in Code-Mixed Text) name format should be: TEAM_NAME@Dravidian-CodeMix-HASOC2021: Title of the paper. For example: NUIG_ULD@Dravidian-CodeMix-HASOC2021: Offensive Language Identification on Multilingual Code Mixing Text.
Following are some general guidelines to keep in mind while submitting the working notes.
- Basic sanity check for grammatical errors and reported results.
- Papers should have sufficient information for reproducing the mentioned results - Papers should follow the appropriate style (We will use CEUR style: details below)
- Check the papers for text reuse / plagiarism. This includes self-plagiarism as well. We would like to stress this point as CEUR is quite strict about it. Any paper found to have plagiarized content should be rejected without further consideration.
- It has been commonly observed that several teams write more than one working notes (for e.g. separate submissions for separate subtasks) and reuse a substantial portion of the text in these multiple submissions. Keeping this in mind, we will NOT be allowing multiple working notes from the same set of authors. They should be asked to merge them into one.
- Please ensure the author names do not have any salutations like Dr., Prof., etc. in the final version.
- Each paper should have a copyright clause included in the paper (See the"Author agreement variants" at http://ceur-ws.org/HOWTOSUBMIT.html)
- Each author should also submit a copyright agreement signed by the authors. (Partially filled agreement will be shared shortly).
All submissions should be in Single column CEUR format. Authors should use one of the CEUR Templates below:
- Overleaf: https://www.overleaf.com/read/gwhxnqcghhdt
- Word and Latex: http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-XXX/CEURART.zip
In general, apart from plagiarism related concerns, we would not be rejecting any paper.
Committees
Organizing Committee- Sentiment
- Bharathi Raja Chakravarthi, Insight SFI Research Centre for Data Analytics, Data Science Institute, National University of Ireland Galway
- Ruba Priyadharshini, ULTRA Arts and Science College, Madurai Kamaraj University, Tamil Nadu
- Sajeetha Thavareesan, Eastern University, Sri Lanka
- Dhivya Chinnappa, Thomson Reuters, United States of America
- John P. McCrae, Data Science Institute, National University of Ireland Galway
- Elizabeth Sherly, Indian Institute of Information Technology and Management-Kerala, India
- Thenmozhi D, SSN College of Engineering, Tamil Nadu
Student Volunteers
- Adeep Hande, Indian Institute of Information Technology Tiruchirappalli
- Rahul Ponnusamy, Indian Institute of Information Technology and Management-Kerala
- Shubhanker Banerjee, National University of Ireland Galway
- Charangan Vasantharajan, University of Moratuwa, Sri Lanka
Organizing committee- HASOC
- Bharathi Raja Chakravarthi, Insight SFI Research Centre for Data Analytics, Data Science Institute, National University of Ireland Galway
- Ratnasingam sakuntharaj, Centre for Information and Communication Technology, Eastern University, Sri Lanka
- Anand Kumar M, Department of Information Technology, National Institute of Technology Karnataka Surathkal, India
- Sajeetha Thavareesan, Eastern University, Sri Lanka
- Premjith B, CEN, Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu
- John P. McCrae, Data Science Institute, National University of Ireland Galway
- Subalalitha C.N, Department Of Computer Science & Engineering SRM Institute Of Science And Technology, Tamil Nadu
- Thomas Mandl, Information Science, University of Hildesheim
Student Volunteers
- Prasanna Kumar Kumaresan, Indian Institute of Information Technology and Management-Kerala
Contact
All questions about submissions should be emailed to dravidiancodemixed@gmail.com and bharathiraja.akr@gmail.com