Albert Gatt


2020

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Annotating for Hate Speech: The MaNeCo Corpus and Some Input from Critical Discourse Analysis
Stavros Assimakopoulos | Rebecca Vella Muskat | Lonneke van der Plas | Albert Gatt
Proceedings of The 12th Language Resources and Evaluation Conference

This paper presents a novel scheme for the annotation of hate speech in corpora of Web 2.0 commentary. The proposed scheme is motivated by the critical analysis of posts made in reaction to news reports on the Mediterranean migration crisis and LGBTIQ+ matters in Malta, which was conducted under the auspices of the EU-funded C.O.N.T.A.C.T. project. Based on the realisation that hate speech is not a clear-cut category to begin with, appears to belong to a continuum of discriminatory discourse and is often realised through the use of indirect linguistic means, it is argued that annotation schemes for its detection should refrain from directly including the label ‘hate speech,’ as different annotators might have different thresholds as to what constitutes hate speech and what not. In view of this, we propose a multi-layer annotation scheme, which is pilot-tested against a binary ±hate speech classification and appears to yield higher inter-annotator agreement. Motivating the postulation of our scheme, we then present the MaNeCo corpus on which it will eventually be used; a substantial corpus of on-line newspaper comments spanning 10 years.

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MASRI-HEADSET: A Maltese Corpus for Speech Recognition
Carlos Daniel Hernandez Mena | Albert Gatt | Andrea DeMarco | Claudia Borg | Lonneke van der Plas | Amanda Muscat | Ian Padovani
Proceedings of The 12th Language Resources and Evaluation Conference

Maltese, the national language of Malta, is spoken by approximately 500,000 people. Speech processing for Maltese is still in its early stages of development. In this paper, we present the first spoken Maltese corpus designed purposely for Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR). The MASRI-HEADSET corpus was developed by the MASRI project at the University of Malta. It consists of 8 hours of speech paired with text, recorded by using short text snippets in a laboratory environment. The speakers were recruited from different geographical locations all over the Maltese islands, and were roughly evenly distributed by gender. This paper also presents some initial results achieved in baseline experiments for Maltese ASR using Sphinx and Kaldi. The MASRI HEADSET Corpus is publicly available for research/academic purposes.

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Proceedings of LREC2020 Workshop "People in language, vision and the mind" (ONION2020)
Patrizia Paggio | Albert Gatt | Roman Klinger
Proceedings of LREC2020 Workshop "People in language, vision and the mind" (ONION2020)