Conference article

From Distributions to Labels: A Lexical Proficiency Analysis using Learner Corpora

David Alfter
University of Gothenburg, Sweden

Yuri Bizzoni
University of Gothenburg, Sweden

Anders Agebjórn
University of Gothenburg, Sweden

Elena Volodina
University of Gothenburg, Sweden

Ildikó Pilán
University of Gothenburg, Sweden

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Published in: Proceedings of the joint workshop on NLP for Computer Assisted Language Learning and NLP for Language Acquisition at SLTC, Umeå, 16th November 2016

Linköping Electronic Conference Proceedings 130:1, p. 1-7

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Published: 2016-11-15

ISBN: 978-91-7685-633-8

ISSN: 1650-3686 (print), 1650-3740 (online)

Abstract

In this work we look at how information from second language learner essay corpora can be used for the evaluation of unseen learner essays. Using a corpus of learner essays which have been graded by well-trained human assessors using the CEFR scale, we extract a list of word distributions over CEFR levels. For the analysis of unseen essays, we want to map each word to a so-called target CEFR level using this word list. However, the task of mapping from a distribution to a single label is not trivial. We are also investigating how we can evaluate the mapping from distribution to label. We show that the distributional profile of words from the essays, informed with the essays’ levels, consistently overlaps with our frequency-based method, in the sense that words holding the same level of proficiency as predicted by our mapping tend to cluster together in a semantic space. In the absence of a gold standard, this information can be useful to see how often a word is associated with the same level in two different models. Also, in this case we have a similarity measure that can show which words are more central to a given level and which words are more peripheral.

Keywords

Lexical complexity, Common European Framework of Reference, Mapping, Semantic space

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