Abstract

The paper describes the application of the code mixed index in Indian social media texts and comparing the complexity to identify language at word level using BLSTM neural model. In Natural Language Processing one of the imperative and relatively less mature areas is a transliteration. During transliteration, issues like language identification, script specification, missing sounds arise in code mixed data. Social media platforms are now widely used by people to express their opinion or interest. The language used by the users in social media nowadays is Code-mixed text, i.e., mixing of two or more languages. In code-mixed data, one language will be written using another language script. So to process such code-mixed text, identification of language used in each word is important for language processing. The major contribution of the work is to propose a technique for identifying the language of Hindi-English code-mixed data used in three social media platforms namely, Facebook, Twitter, and WhatsApp. We propose a deep learning framework based on cBoW and Skip gram model for language identification in code mixed data. Popular word embedding features were used for the representation of each word. Many researches have been recently done in the field of language identification, but word level language identification in the transliterated environment is a current research issue in code mixed data. We have implemented a deep learning model based on BLSTM that predicts the origin of the word from language perspective in the sequence based on the specific words that have come before it in the sequence. The multichannel neural networks combining CNN and BLSTM for word level language identification of code-mixed data where English and Hindi roman transliteration has been used. Combining this with a cBoW and Skip gram for evaluation. The proposed system BLSTM context capture module gives better accuracy for word embedding model as compared to character embedding evaluated on our two testing sets. The problem is modeled collectively with the deep-learning design. We tend to gift an in-depth empirical analysis of the proposed methodology against standard approaches for language identification.

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