Graphemic Normalization of the Perso-Arabic Script
Since its original appearance in 1991, the Perso-Arabic script representation in Unicode has grown from 169 to over 440 atomic isolated characters spread over several code pages representing standard letters, various diacritics and punctuation for the original Arabic and numerous other regional orth...
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Zusammenfassung: | Since its original appearance in 1991, the Perso-Arabic script representation
in Unicode has grown from 169 to over 440 atomic isolated characters spread
over several code pages representing standard letters, various diacritics and
punctuation for the original Arabic and numerous other regional orthographic
traditions. This paper documents the challenges that Perso-Arabic presents
beyond the best-documented languages, such as Arabic and Persian, building on
earlier work by the expert community. We particularly focus on the situation in
natural language processing (NLP), which is affected by multiple, often
neglected, issues such as the use of visually ambiguous yet canonically
nonequivalent letters and the mixing of letters from different orthographies.
Among the contributing conflating factors are the lack of input methods, the
instability of modern orthographies, insufficient literacy, and loss or lack of
orthographic tradition. We evaluate the effects of script normalization on
eight languages from diverse language families in the Perso-Arabic script
diaspora on machine translation and statistical language modeling tasks. Our
results indicate statistically significant improvements in performance in most
conditions for all the languages considered when normalization is applied. We
argue that better understanding and representation of Perso-Arabic script
variation within regional orthographic traditions, where those are present, is
crucial for further progress of modern computational NLP techniques especially
for languages with a paucity of resources. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2210.12273 |