The `corpipe23-corefud1.1-231206` is a `mT5-large`-based multilingual model for coreference resolution usable in CorPipe 23 (https://github.com/ufal/crac2023-corpipe). It is released under the CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.
The model is language agnostic (no _corpus id_ on input), so it can be used to predict coreference in any `mT5` language (for zero-shot evaluation, see the paper). However, note that the empty nodes must be present already on input, they are not predicted (the same settings as in the CRAC23 shared task).
The `corpipe23-corefud1.2-240906` is a `mT5-large`-based multilingual model for coreference resolution usable in CorPipe 23 <https://github.com/ufal/crac2023-corpipe>. It is released under the CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.
The model is language agnostic (no corpus id on input), so it can be in theory used to predict coreference in any `mT5` language. However, the model expects empty nodes to be already present on input, predicted by the https://www.kaggle.com/models/ufal-mff/crac2024_zero_nodes_baseline/.
This model was present in the CorPipe 24 paper as an alternative to a single-stage approach, where the empty nodes are predicted joinly with coreference resolution (via http://hdl.handle.net/11234/1-5672), an approach circa twice as fast but of slightly worse quality.
The `corpipe24-corefud1.2-240906` is a `mT5-large`-based multilingual model for coreference resolution usable in CorPipe 24 (https://github.com/ufal/crac2024-corpipe). It is released under the CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.
The model is language agnostic (no corpus id on input), so it can be in theory used to predict coreference in any `mT5` language.
This model jointly predicts also the empty nodes needed for zero coreference. The paper introducing this model also presents an alternative two-stage approach first predicting empty nodes (via https://www.kaggle.com/models/ufal-mff/crac2024_zero_nodes_baseline/) and then performing coreference resolution (via http://hdl.handle.net/11234/1-5673), which is circa twice as slow but slightly better.
We present DaMuEL, a large Multilingual Dataset for Entity Linking containing data in 53 languages. DaMuEL consists of two components: a knowledge base that contains language-agnostic information about entities, including their claims from Wikidata and named entity types (PER, ORG, LOC, EVENT, BRAND, WORK_OF_ART, MANUFACTURED); and Wikipedia texts with entity mentions linked to the knowledge base, along with language-specific text from Wikidata such as labels, aliases, and descriptions, stored separately for each language. The Wikidata QID is used as a persistent, language-agnostic identifier, enabling the combination of the knowledge base with language-specific texts and information for each entity. Wikipedia documents deliberately annotate only a single mention for every entity present; we further automatically detect all mentions of named entities linked from each document. The dataset contains 27.9M named entities in the knowledge base and 12.3G tokens from Wikipedia texts. The dataset is published under the CC BY-SA licence.
Texts in 107 languages from the W2C corpus (http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-097C-0000-0022-6133-9), first 1,000,000 tokens per language, tagged by the delexicalized tagger described in Yu et al. (2016, LREC, Portorož, Slovenia).
Texts in 107 languages from the W2C corpus (http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-097C-0000-0022-6133-9), first 1,000,000 tokens per language, tagged by the delexicalized tagger described in Yu et al. (2016, LREC, Portorož, Slovenia).
Changes in version 1.1:
1. Universal Dependencies tagset instead of the older and smaller Google Universal POS tagset.
2. SVM classifier trained on Universal Dependencies 1.2 instead of HamleDT 2.0.
3. Balto-Slavic languages, Germanic languages and Romance languages were tagged by classifier trained only on the respective group of languages. Other languages were tagged by a classifier trained on all available languages. The "c7" combination from version 1.0 is no longer used.