2024
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SetFit: A Robust Approach for Offensive Content Detection in Tamil-English Code-Mixed Conversations Using Sentence Transfer Fine-tuning
Kathiravan Pannerselvam
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Saranya Rajiakodi
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Sajeetha Thavareesan
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Sathiyaraj Thangasamy
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Kishore Ponnusamy
Proceedings of the Fourth Workshop on Speech, Vision, and Language Technologies for Dravidian Languages
Code-mixed languages are increasingly prevalent on social media and online platforms, presenting significant challenges in offensive content detection for natural language processing (NLP) systems. Our study explores how effectively the Sentence Transfer Fine-tuning (Set-Fit) method, combined with logistic regression, detects offensive content in a Tamil-English code-mixed dataset. We compare our model’s performance with five other NLP models: Multilingual BERT (mBERT), LSTM, BERT, IndicBERT, and Language-agnostic BERT Sentence Embeddings (LaBSE). Our model, SetFit, outperforms these models in accuracy, achieving an impressive 89.72%, significantly higher than other models. These results suggest the sentence transformer model’s substantial potential for detecting offensive content in codemixed languages. Our study provides valuable insights into the sentence transformer model’s ability to identify various types of offensive material in Tamil-English online conversations, paving the way for more advanced NLP systems tailored to code-mixed languages.
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Overview of Third Shared Task on Homophobia and Transphobia Detection in Social Media Comments
Bharathi Raja Chakravarthi
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Prasanna Kumaresan
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Ruba Priyadharshini
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Paul Buitelaar
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Asha Hegde
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Hosahalli Shashirekha
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Saranya Rajiakodi
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Miguel Ángel García
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Salud María Jiménez-Zafra
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José García-Díaz
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Rafael Valencia-García
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Kishore Ponnusamy
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Poorvi Shetty
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Daniel García-Baena
Proceedings of the Fourth Workshop on Language Technology for Equality, Diversity, Inclusion
This paper provides a comprehensive summary of the “Homophobia and Transphobia Detection in Social Media Comments” shared task, which was held at the LT-EDI@EACL 2024. The objective of this task was to develop systems capable of identifying instances of homophobia and transphobia within social media comments. This challenge was extended across ten languages: English, Tamil, Malayalam, Telugu, Kannada, Gujarati, Hindi, Marathi, Spanish, and Tulu. Each comment in the dataset was annotated into three categories. The shared task attracted significant interest, with over 60 teams participating through the CodaLab platform. The submission of prediction from the participants was evaluated with the macro F1 score.
2022
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Findings of the Shared Task on Emotion Analysis in Tamil
Anbukkarasi Sampath
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Thenmozhi Durairaj
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Bharathi Raja Chakravarthi
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Ruba Priyadharshini
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Subalalitha Cn
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Kogilavani Shanmugavadivel
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Sajeetha Thavareesan
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Sathiyaraj Thangasamy
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Parameswari Krishnamurthy
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Adeep Hande
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Sean Benhur
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Kishore Ponnusamy
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Santhiya Pandiyan
Proceedings of the Second Workshop on Speech and Language Technologies for Dravidian Languages
This paper presents the overview of the shared task on emotional analysis in Tamil. The result of the shared task is presented at the workshop. This paper presents the dataset used in the shared task, task description, and the methodology used by the participants and the evaluation results of the submission. This task is organized as two Tasks. Task A is carried with 11 emotions annotated data for social media comments in Tamil and Task B is organized with 31 fine-grained emotion annotated data for social media comments in Tamil. For conducting experiments, training and development datasets were provided to the participants and results are evaluated for the unseen data. Totally we have received around 24 submissions from 13 teams. For evaluating the models, Precision, Recall, micro average metrics are used.