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.}
}
EngVallex 2.0 as a slightly updated version of EngVallex. It is the English counterpart of the PDT-Vallex valency lexicon, using the same view of valency, valency frames and the description of a surface form of verbal arguments. EngVallex contains links also to PropBank (English predicate-argument lexicon). The EngVallex lexicon is fully linked to the English side of the PCEDT parallel treebank(s), which is in fact the PTB re-annotated using the Prague Dependency Treebank style of annotation. The EngVallex is available in an XML format in our repository, and also in a searchable form with examples from the PCEDT. EngVallex 2.0 is the same dataset as the EngVallex lexicon packaged with the PCEDT 3.0 corpus, but published separately under a more permissive licence, avoiding the need for LDC licence which is tied to PCEDT 3.0 as a whole.
This machine translation test set contains 2223 Czech sentences collected within the FAUST project (https://ufal.mff.cuni.cz/grants/faust, http://hdl.handle.net/11234/1-3308).
Each original (noisy) sentence was normalized (clean1 and clean2) and translated to English independently by two translators.
Grammar Error Correction Corpus for Czech (GECCC) consists of 83 058 sentences and covers four diverse domains, including essays written by native students, informal website texts, essays written by Romani ethnic minority children and teenagers and essays written by nonnative speakers. All domains are professionally annotated for GEC errors in a unified manner, and errors were automatically categorized with a Czech-specific version of ERRANT released at https://github.com/ufal/errant_czech
The dataset was introduced in the paper Czech Grammar Error Correction with a Large and Diverse Corpus that was accepted to TACL. Until published in TACL, see the arXiv version: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2201.05590.pdf
Grammar Error Correction Corpus for Czech (GECCC) consists of 83 058 sentences and covers four diverse domains, including essays written by native students, informal website texts, essays written by Romani ethnic minority children and teenagers and essays written by nonnative speakers. All domains are professionally annotated for GEC errors in a unified manner, and errors were automatically categorized with a Czech-specific version of ERRANT released at https://github.com/ufal/errant_czech
The dataset was introduced in the paper Czech Grammar Error Correction with a Large and Diverse Corpus that was accepted to TACL. Until published in TACL, see the arXiv version: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2201.05590.pdf
This version fixes double annotation errors in train and dev M2 files, and also contains more metadata information.
This package contains data used in the IWPT 2020 shared task. It contains training, development and test (evaluation) datasets. The data is based on a subset of Universal Dependencies release 2.5 (http://hdl.handle.net/11234/1-3105) but some treebanks contain additional enhanced annotations. Moreover, not all of these additions became part of Universal Dependencies release 2.6 (http://hdl.handle.net/11234/1-3226), which makes the shared task data unique and worth a separate release to enable later comparison with new parsing algorithms. The package also contains a number of Perl and Python scripts that have been used to process the data during preparation and during the shared task. Finally, the package includes the official primary submission of each team participating in the shared task.
This package contains data used in the IWPT 2021 shared task. It contains training, development and test (evaluation) datasets. The data is based on a subset of Universal Dependencies release 2.7 (http://hdl.handle.net/11234/1-3424) but some treebanks contain additional enhanced annotations. Moreover, not all of these additions became part of Universal Dependencies release 2.8 (http://hdl.handle.net/11234/1-3687), which makes the shared task data unique and worth a separate release to enable later comparison with new parsing algorithms. The package also contains a number of Perl and Python scripts that have been used to process the data during preparation and during the shared task. Finally, the package includes the official primary submission of each team participating in the shared task.
The collection comprises the relevance judgments used in the 2023 LongEval Information Retrieval Lab (https://clef-longeval.github.io/), organized at CLEF. It consists of three sets of relevance judgments:
1) Relevance judgments for the heldout queries from the LongEval Train Collection (http://hdl.handle.net/11234/1-5010).
2) Relevance judgments for the short-term persistence (sub-task A) queries from the LongEval Test Collection (http://hdl.handle.net/11234/1-5139).
3) Relevance judgments for the long-term persistence (sub-task B) queries from the LongEval Test Collection (http://hdl.handle.net/11234/1-5139).
These judgments were provided by the Qwant search engine (https://www.qwant.com) and were generated using a click model. The click model output was based on the clicks of Qwant's users, but it mitigates noise from raw user clicks caused by positional bias and also better safeguards users' privacy. Consequently, it can serve as a reliable soft relevance estimate for evaluating and training models.
The collection includes a total of 1,420 judgments for the heldout queries, with 74 considered highly relevant and 326 deemed relevant. For the short-term sub-task queries, there are 12,217 judgments, including 762 highly relevant and 2,608 relevant ones. As for the long-term sub-task queries, there are 13,467 judgments, with 936 being highly relevant and 2,899 relevant.
The collection consists of queries and documents provided by the Qwant search Engine (https://www.qwant.com). The queries, which were issued by the users of Qwant, are based on the selected trending topics. The documents in the collection are the webpages which were selected with respect to these queries using the Qwant click model. Apart from the documents selected using this model, the collection also contains randomly selected documents from the Qwant index.
The collection serves as the official test collection for the 2023 LongEval Information Retrieval Lab (https://clef-longeval.github.io/) organised at CLEF. The collection contains test datasets for two organized sub-tasks: short-term persistence (sub-task A) and long-term persistence (sub-task B). The data for the short-term persistence sub-task was collected over July 2022 and this dataset contains 1,593,376 documents and 882 queries. The data for the long-term persistence sub-task was collected over September 2022 and this dataset consists of 1,081,334 documents and 923 queries. Apart from the original French versions of the webpages and queries, the collection also contains their translations into English.
The collection consists of queries and documents provided by the Qwant search Engine (https://www.qwant.com). The queries, which were issued by the users of Qwant, are based on the selected trending topics. The documents in the collection were selected with respect to these queries using the Qwant click model. Apart from the documents selected using this model, the collection also contains randomly selected documents from the Qwant index. All the data were collected over June 2022. In total, the collection contains 672 train queries, with corresponding 9656 assessments coming from the Qwant click model, and 98 heldout queries. The set of documents consist of 1,570,734 downloaded, cleaned and filtered Web Pages. Apart from their original French versions, the collection also contains translations of the webpages and queries into English. The collection serves as the official training collection for the 2023 LongEval Information Retrieval Lab (https://clef-longeval.github.io/) organised at CLEF.
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