We present a test corpus of audio recordings and transcriptions of presentations of students' enterprises together with their slides and web-pages. The corpus is intended for evaluation of automatic speech recognition (ASR) systems, especially in conditions where the prior availability of in-domain vocabulary and named entities is benefitable.
The corpus consists of 39 presentations in English, each up to 90 seconds long, and slides and web-pages in Czech, Slovak, English, German, Romanian, Italian or Spanish.
The speakers are high school students from European countries with English as their second language.
We benchmark three baseline ASR systems on the corpus and show their imperfection.
ELITR Minuting Corpus consists of transcripts of meetings in Czech and English, their manually created summaries ("minutes") and manual alignments between the two.
Czech meetings are in the computer science and public administration domains and English meetings are in the computer science domain.
Each transcript has one or multiple corresponding minutes files. Alignments are only provided for a portion of the data.
This corpus contains 59 Czech and 120 English meeting transcripts, consisting of 71097 and 87322 dialogue turns respectively. For Czech meetings, we provide 147 total minutes with 55 of them aligned. For English meetings, it is 256 total minutes with 111 of them aligned.
Please find a more detailed description of the data in the included README and stats.tsv files.
If you use this corpus, please cite:
Nedoluzhko, A., Singh, M., Hledíková, M., Ghosal, T., and Bojar, O.
(2022). ELITR Minuting Corpus: A novel dataset for automatic minuting
from multi-party meetings in English and Czech. In Proceedings of the
13th International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation
(LREC-2022), Marseille, France, June. European Language Resources
Association (ELRA). In print.
@inproceedings{elitr-minuting-corpus:2022,
author = {Anna Nedoluzhko and Muskaan Singh and Marie
Hled{\'{\i}}kov{\'{a}} and Tirthankar Ghosal and Ond{\v{r}}ej Bojar},
title = {{ELITR} {M}inuting {C}orpus: {A} Novel Dataset for
Automatic Minuting from Multi-Party Meetings in {E}nglish and {C}zech},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 13th International Conference
on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC-2022)},
year = 2022,
month = {June},
address = {Marseille, France},
publisher = {European Language Resources Association (ELRA)},
note = {In print.}
}
ESIC (Europarl Simultaneous Interpreting Corpus) is a corpus of 370 speeches (10 hours) in English, with manual transcripts, transcribed simultaneous interpreting into Czech and German, and parallel translations.
The corpus contains source English videos and audios. The interpreters' voices are not published within the corpus, but there is a tool that downloads them from the web of European Parliament, where they are publicly avaiable.
The transcripts are equipped with metadata (disfluencies, mixing voices and languages, read or spontaneous speech, etc.), punctuated, and with word-level timestamps.
The speeches in the corpus come from the European Parliament plenary sessions, from the period 2008-11. Most of the speakers are MEP, both native and non-native speakers of English. The corpus contains metadata about the speakers (name, surname, id, fraction) and about the speech (date, topic, read or spontaneous).
The current version of ESIC is v1.0. It has validation and evaluation parts.
ESIC (Europarl Simultaneous Interpreting Corpus) is a corpus of 370 speeches (10 hours) in English, with manual transcripts, transcribed simultaneous interpreting into Czech and German, and parallel translations.
The corpus contains source English videos and audios. The interpreters' voices are not published within the corpus, but there is a tool that downloads them from the web of European Parliament, where they are publicly avaiable.
The transcripts are equipped with metadata (disfluencies, mixing voices and languages, read or spontaneous speech, etc.), punctuated, and with word-level timestamps.
The speeches in the corpus come from the European Parliament plenary sessions, from the period 2008-11. Most of the speakers are MEP, both native and non-native speakers of English. The corpus contains metadata about the speakers (name, surname, id, fraction) and about the speech (date, topic, read or spontaneous).
ESIC has validation and evaluation parts.
The current version is ESIC v1.1, it extends v1.0 with manual sentence alignment of the tri-parallel texts, and with bi-parallel sentence alignment of English original transcripts and German interpreting.
OAGK is a keyword extraction/generation dataset consisting of 2.2 million abstracts, titles and keyword strings from cientific articles. Texts were lowercased and tokenized with Stanford CoreNLP tokenizer. No other preprocessing steps were applied in this release version. Dataset records (samples) are stored as JSON lines in each text file.
This data is derived from OAG data collection (https://aminer.org/open-academic-graph) which was released under ODC-BY licence.
This data (OAGK Keyword Generation Dataset) is released under CC-BY licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
If using it, please cite the following paper:
Çano, Erion and Bojar, Ondřej, 2019, Keyphrase Generation: A Text Summarization Struggle, 2019 Annual Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics, June 2019, Minneapolis, USA
OAGKX is a keyword extraction/generation dataset consisting of 22674436 abstracts, titles and keyword strings from scientific articles. The texts were lowercased and tokenized with Stanford CoreNLP tokenizer. No other preprocessing steps were applied in this release version. Dataset records (samples) are stored as JSON lines in each text file.
The data is derived from OAG data collection (https://aminer.org/open-academic-graph) which was released under ODC-BY license.
This data (OAGKX Keyword Generation Dataset) is released under CC-BY license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
If using it, please cite the following paper:
Çano Erion, Bojar Ondřej. Keyphrase Generation: A Multi-Aspect Survey. FRUCT 2019, Proceedings of the 25th Conference of the Open Innovations Association FRUCT, Helsinki, Finland, Nov. 2019
To reproduce the experiments in the above paper, you can use the first 100000 lines of part_0_0.txt file.
OAGL is a paper metadata dataset consisting of 17528680 records which comprise various scientific publication attributes like abstracts, titles, keywords, publication years, venues, etc. The last field of each record is the page length of the corresponding publication. Dataset records (samples) are stored as JSON lines in each text file. The data is derived from OAG data collection (https://aminer.org/open-academic-graph) which was released under ODC-BY license. This data (OAGL Paper Metadata Dataset) is released under CC-BY license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
If using it, please cite the following paper:
Çano Erion, Bojar Ondřej: How Many Pages? Paper Length Prediction from the Metadata.
NLPIR 2020, Proceedings of the the 4th International Conference on Natural Language
Processing and Information Retrieval, Seoul, Korea, December 2020.
OAGS is a title generation dataset consisting of 34993700 abstracts and titles from scientific articles. Texts were lowercased and tokenized with Stanford CoreNLP tokenizer. No other preprocessing steps were applied in this release version. Dataset records (samples) are stored as JSON lines in each text file. The data is derived from OAG data collection (https://aminer.org/open-academic-graph) which was released under ODC-BY licence. This data (OAGS Title Generation Dataset) is released under CC-BY licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). If using it, please cite the following paper: Çano, Erion and Bojar, Ondřej, 2019, "Efficiency Metrics for Data-Driven Models: A Text Summarization Case Study", INLG 2019, The 12th International Conference on Natural Language Generation, November 2019, Tokyo, Japan. To reproduce the experiments in the above paper, you can use oags_train1.txt, oags_train2.txt, oags_train3.txt, oags_test.txt and oags_val.txt files. If you need more data samples you can get them from oags_train_backup.txt and oags_val-test_backup.txt.
OAGSX is a title generation dataset consisting of 34408509 abstracts and titles from scientific articles. The texts were lowercased and tokenized with Stanford CoreNLP tokenizer. No other preprocessing steps were applied in this release version. Dataset records (samples) are stored as JSON lines in each text file.
The data is derived from OAG data collection (https://aminer.org/open-academic-graph) which was released under ODC-BY license.
This data (OAGSX Title Generation Dataset) is released under CC-BY license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
If using it, please consider citing also the following paper:
Çano Erion, Bojar Ondřej. Two Huge Title and Keyword Generation Corpora of Research Articles.
LREC 2020, Proceedings of the the 12th International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation,
Marseille, France, May 2020.
The ParCzech 3.0 corpus is the third version of ParCzech consisting of stenographic protocols that record the Chamber of Deputies’ meetings held in the 7th term (2013-2017) and the current 8th term (2017-Mar 2021). The protocols are provided in their original HTML format, Parla-CLARIN TEI format, and the format suitable for Automatic Speech Recognition. The corpus is automatically enriched with the morphological, syntactic, and named-entity annotations using the procedures UDPipe 2 and NameTag 2. The audio files are aligned with the texts in the annotated TEI files.