We describe the system built by the National Research Council Canada for the \u201dDiscriminating between similar languages\u201d (DSL) shared task. Our system uses various statistical classifiers and makes predictions based on a two-stage process: we first predict the language group, then discriminate between languages or variants within the group. Language groups are predicted using a generative classifier with 99.99% accuracy on the five target groups. Within each group (except English), we use a voting combination of discriminative classifiers trained on a variety of feature spaces, achieving an average accuracy of 95.71%, with per-group accuracy between 90.95% and 100% depending on the group. This approach turns out to reach the best p...
This paper describes the system developed by the Centre for English Corpus Linguis- tics (CECL) to d...
International audienceThe present contribution revolves around efficient approaches to language clas...
The goal of the present study was to devise a means of representing languages in a perceptual simila...
We describe the system built by the National Research Council Canada for the ”Discriminating between...
We describe the system built by the National Research Council Canada for the "Discriminating between...
We describe the system built by the National Research Council (NRC) Canada for the 2015 shared task ...
This paper describes an approach to discriminating similar languages using word- and character-based...
This paper presents the compilation of the DSL corpus collection created for the DSL (Discriminating...
The Discriminating between Similar Languages (DSL) shared task at VarDial challenged partici-pants t...
In this paper we describe the language identification system we developed for the Discriminating Sim...
ISBN 978-1-945626-43-2International audienceThe present contribution revolves around a contrastive s...
We present the results of the 2nd edition of the Discriminating between Similar Lan-guages (DSL) sha...
This paper describes the GW/LT3 contribution to the 2016 VarDial shared task on the identification o...
This paper presents a novel neural architecture capable of outperforming state-of-the-art systems on...
Language identification is an important first step in many IR and NLP applications. Most publicly av...
This paper describes the system developed by the Centre for English Corpus Linguis- tics (CECL) to d...
International audienceThe present contribution revolves around efficient approaches to language clas...
The goal of the present study was to devise a means of representing languages in a perceptual simila...
We describe the system built by the National Research Council Canada for the ”Discriminating between...
We describe the system built by the National Research Council Canada for the "Discriminating between...
We describe the system built by the National Research Council (NRC) Canada for the 2015 shared task ...
This paper describes an approach to discriminating similar languages using word- and character-based...
This paper presents the compilation of the DSL corpus collection created for the DSL (Discriminating...
The Discriminating between Similar Languages (DSL) shared task at VarDial challenged partici-pants t...
In this paper we describe the language identification system we developed for the Discriminating Sim...
ISBN 978-1-945626-43-2International audienceThe present contribution revolves around a contrastive s...
We present the results of the 2nd edition of the Discriminating between Similar Lan-guages (DSL) sha...
This paper describes the GW/LT3 contribution to the 2016 VarDial shared task on the identification o...
This paper presents a novel neural architecture capable of outperforming state-of-the-art systems on...
Language identification is an important first step in many IR and NLP applications. Most publicly av...
This paper describes the system developed by the Centre for English Corpus Linguis- tics (CECL) to d...
International audienceThe present contribution revolves around efficient approaches to language clas...
The goal of the present study was to devise a means of representing languages in a perceptual simila...