Ana Zwitter Vitez

Also published as: Ana Zwitter Vitez


2022

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Extracting and Analysing Metaphors in Migration Media Discourse: towards a Metaphor Annotation Scheme
Ana Zwitter Vitez | Mojca Brglez | Marko Robnik Šikonja | Tadej Škvorc | Andreja Vezovnik | Senja Pollak
Proceedings of the Thirteenth Language Resources and Evaluation Conference

The study of metaphors in media discourse is an increasingly researched topic as media are an important shaper of social reality and metaphors are an indicator of how we think about certain issues through references to other things. We present a neural transfer learning method for detecting metaphorical sentences in Slovene and evaluate its performance on a gold standard corpus of metaphors (classification accuracy of 0.725), as well as on a sample of a domain specific corpus of migrations (precision of 0.40 for extracting domain metaphors and 0.74 if evaluated only on a set of migration related sentences). Based on empirical results and findings of our analysis, we propose a novel metaphor annotation scheme containing linguistic level, conceptual level, and stance information. The new scheme can be used for future metaphor annotations of other socially relevant topics.

2014

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The Slovene BNSI Broadcast News database and reference speech corpus GOS: Towards the uniform guidelines for future work
Andrej Žgank | Ana Zwitter Vitez | Darinka Verdonik
Proceedings of the Ninth International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC'14)

The aim of the paper is to search for common guidelines for the future development of speech databases for less resourced languages in order to make them the most useful for both main fields of their use, linguistic research and speech technologies. We compare two standards for creating speech databases, one followed when developing the Slovene speech database for automatic speech recognition ― BNSI Broadcast News, the other followed when developing the Slovene reference speech corpus GOS, and outline possible common guidelines for future work. We also present an add-on for the GOS corpus, which enables its usage for automatic speech recognition.