Simon J. Greenhill


2023

pdf bib
Grambank’s Typological Advances Support Computational Research on Diverse Languages
Hannah J. Haynie | Damián Blasi | Hedvig Skirgård | Simon J. Greenhill | Quentin D. Atkinson | Russell D. Gray
Proceedings of the 5th Workshop on Research in Computational Linguistic Typology and Multilingual NLP

Of approximately 7,000 languages around the world, only a handful have abundant computational resources. Extending the reach of language technologies to diverse, less-resourced languages is important for tackling the challenges of digital equity and inclusion. Here we introduce the Grambank typological database as a resource to support such efforts. To date, work that uses typological data to extend computational research to less-resourced languages has relied on cross-linguistic morphosyntax datasets that are sparsely populated, use categorical coding that can be difficult to interpret, and introduce redundant information across features. Grambank presents similar information (e.g. word order, grammatical relation marking, constructions like interrogatives and negation), but is designed to avoid several disadvantages of legacy typological resources. Grambank’s 195 features encode basic information about morphology and syntax for 2,467 languages. 83% of these languages are annotated for at least 100 features. By implementing binary coding for most features and curating the dataset to avoid logical dependencies, Grambank presents information in a user-friendly format for computational applications. The scale, completeness, reliability, format, and documentation of Grambank make it a useful resource for linguistically-informed models, cross-lingual NLP, and research targeting less-resourced languages.

2011

pdf bib
Levenshtein Distances Fail to Identify Language Relationships Accurately
Simon J. Greenhill
Computational Linguistics, Volume 37, Issue 4 - December 2011