OLAC Record
oai:www.ldc.upenn.edu:LDC2007T04

Metadata
Title:Fisher Levantine Arabic Conversational Telephone Speech, Transcripts
Access Rights:Licensing Instructions for Subscription & Standard Members, and Non-Members: http://www.ldc.upenn.edu/language-resources/data/obtaining
Bibliographic Citation:Maamouri, Mohamed, et al. Fisher Levantine Arabic Conversational Telephone Speech, Transcripts LDC2007T04. Web Download. Philadelphia: Linguistic Data Consortium, 2007
Contributor:Maamouri, Mohamed
Buckwalter, Tim
Graff, David
Jin, Hubert
Date (W3CDTF):2007
Date Issued (W3CDTF):2007-03-16
Description:*Introduction* Levantine Arabic is spoken along the western Mediterranean coast from Anatolia to the Sinai Peninsula and encompasses the local dialects of Lebanon, Syria and Palestine. There are two distinct varieties: Northern, centered around Syria and Lebanon and Southern, spoken in Jordan and Palestine. Northern Levantine Arabic speakers include approximately 8.8 million speakers in Syria and 6 million speakers in Lebanon. Southern Levantine Arabic speakers include approximately 3.5 million speakers in Jordan, 1.6 million speakers in Palestine and nearly one million speakers in Israel. Fisher Levantine Arabic Conversational Telephone Speech, Transcripts contains transcripts for 279 telephone conversations. The majority of the speakers are from Jordan, Lebanon and Palestine. The corresponding telephone speech is contained in Fisher Levantine Arabic Conversational Telephone Speech. Speaker Distribution by Region Jordan 60% Palestine 15% Lebanon 15% Syria 8% other 2% The Fisher telephone conversation collection protocol was created at LDC to address a critical need of developers trying to build robust automatic speech recognition (ASR) systems. Previous collection protocols, such as CALLFRIEND and Switchboard-II and the resulting corpora, have been adapted for ASR research but were in fact developed for language and speaker identification respectively. Although the CALLHOME protocol and corpora were developed to support ASR technology, they feature small numbers of speakers making telephone calls of relatively long duration with narrow vocabulary across the collection. CALLHOME conversations are challengingly natural and intimate. Under the Fisher protocol, a very large number of participants each make a few calls of short duration speaking to other participants, whom they typically do not know, about assigned topics. This maximizes inter-speaker variation and vocabulary breadth although it also increases formality. Previous protocols such as CALLHOME, CALLFRIEND and Switchboard relied upon participant activity to drive the collection. Fisher is unique in being platform driven rather than participant driven. Participants who wish to initiate a call may do so however the collection platform initiates the majority of calls. Participants need only answer their phones at the times they specified when registering for the study. To encourage a broad range of vocabulary, Fisher participants are asked to speak on an assigned topic which is selected at random from a list, which changes every 24 hours and which is assigned to all subjects paired on that day. Some topics are inherited or refined from previous Switchboard studies while others were developed specifically for the Fisher protocol. *Data* The transcripts were created with green and yellow layers using LDC's Multi-Dialectal Transcription Tool (AMADAT). The green layer seeks to anchor dialectal forms to similar or related Modern Standard Arabic orothgraphy-based forms. The yellow layer is a more careful and detailed transcription that adds functionally necessary vowels and marks important sociolinguistic variations and morphophonemic features. The green-layer transcripts in this corpus are a subset of the transcripts contained in Levantine Arabic QT Training Data Set 5, Transcripts, LDC2006T07. The yellow-layer transcription was added in this release. *Samples* For an example of the text contained in this corpus, please view this image of the transcriptions (jpeg format).
Extent:Corpus size: 7168 KB
Identifier:LDC2007T04
https://catalog.ldc.upenn.edu/LDC2007T04
ISBN: 1-58563-411-5
ISLRN: 146-188-087-767-2
DOI: 10.35111/adse-qz03
Language:North Levantine Arabic
South Levantine Arabic
Language (ISO639):apc
ajp
License:LDC User Agreement for Non-Members: https://catalog.ldc.upenn.edu/license/ldc-non-members-agreement.pdf
Medium:Distribution: Web Download
Publisher:Linguistic Data Consortium
Publisher (URI):https://www.ldc.upenn.edu
Relation (URI):https://catalog.ldc.upenn.edu/docs/LDC2007T04
Rights Holder:Portions © 2003-2007 Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania
Type (DCMI):Text
Type (OLAC):primary_text

OLAC Info

Archive:  The LDC Corpus Catalog
Description:  http://www.language-archives.org/archive/www.ldc.upenn.edu
GetRecord:  OAI-PMH request for OLAC format
GetRecord:  Pre-generated XML file

OAI Info

OaiIdentifier:  oai:www.ldc.upenn.edu:LDC2007T04
DateStamp:  2021-09-27
GetRecord:  OAI-PMH request for simple DC format

Search Info

Citation: Maamouri, Mohamed; Buckwalter, Tim; Graff, David; Jin, Hubert. 2007. Linguistic Data Consortium.
Terms: area_Asia country_JO country_SY dcmi_Text iso639_ajp iso639_apc olac_primary_text


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