Papers by Chris Emezue
Cross-lingual Open-Retrieval Question Answering for African Languages (2023.findings-emnlp)
Copied to clipboard
Odunayo Ogundepo, Tajuddeen Gwadabe, Clara Rivera, Jonathan Clark, Sebastian Ruder, David Adelani, Bonaventure Dossou, Abdou Diop, Claytone Sikasote, Gilles Hacheme, Happy Buzaaba, Ignatius Ezeani, Rooweither Mabuya, Salomey Osei, Chris Emezue, Albert Kahira, Shamsuddeen Muhammad, Akintunde Oladipo, Abraham Owodunni, Atnafu Tonja, Iyanuoluwa Shode, Akari Asai, Anuoluwapo Aremu, Ayodele Awokoya, Bernard Opoku, Chiamaka Chukwuneke, Christine Mwase, Clemencia Siro, Stephen Arthur, Tunde Ajayi, Verrah Otiende, Andre Rubungo, Boyd Sinkala, Daniel Ajisafe, Emeka Onwuegbuzia, Falalu Lawan, Ibrahim Ahmad, Jesujoba Alabi, Chinedu Mbonu, Mofetoluwa Adeyemi, Mofya Phiri, Orevaoghene Ahia, Ruqayya Iro, Sonia Adhiambo
| Challenge: | Our Dataset is the first cross-lingual QA dataset with a focus on African languages. |
| Approach: | They propose to use African languages as the only high-coverage source of answer content for cross-lingual open-retrieval question answering systems. |
| Outcome: | Our Dataset includes 12,000+ XOR QA examples across 10 African languages. |
AccentFold: A Journey through African Accents for Zero-Shot ASR Adaptation to Target Accents (2024.findings-eacl)
Copied to clipboard
| Challenge: | AccentFold uses spatial relationships to improve speech recognition for accented speech . existing methods for accent recognition have been limited due to data scarcity and budget constraints . |
| Approach: | They propose a method that exploits spatial relationships between learned accent embeddings to improve downstream automatic speech recognition. |
| Outcome: | The proposed method outperforms baseline methods in accented speech training. |
A Few Thousand Translations Go a Long Way! Leveraging Pre-trained Models for African News Translation (2022.naacl-main)
Copied to clipboard
David Adelani, Jesujoba Alabi, Angela Fan, Julia Kreutzer, Xiaoyu Shen, Machel Reid, Dana Ruiter, Dietrich Klakow, Peter Nabende, Ernie Chang, Tajuddeen Gwadabe, Freshia Sackey, Bonaventure F. P. Dossou, Chris Emezue, Colin Leong, Michael Beukman, Shamsuddeen Muhammad, Guyo Jarso, Oreen Yousuf, Andre Niyongabo Rubungo, Gilles Hacheme, Eric Peter Wairagala, Muhammad Umair Nasir, Benjamin Ajibade, Tunde Ajayi, Yvonne Gitau, Jade Abbott, Mohamed Ahmed, Millicent Ochieng, Anuoluwapo Aremu, Perez Ogayo, Jonathan Mukiibi, Fatoumata Ouoba Kabore, Godson Kalipe, Derguene Mbaye, Allahsera Auguste Tapo, Victoire Memdjokam Koagne, Edwin Munkoh-Buabeng, Valencia Wagner, Idris Abdulmumin, Ayodele Awokoya, Happy Buzaaba, Blessing Sibanda, Andiswa Bukula, Sam Manthalu
| Challenge: | Low-resource languages are left out of large-scale pretraining datasets . authors explore how to leverage existing pre-trained models to create low-resourced translation systems for 16 African languages. |
| Approach: | They investigate how large-scale pre-trained models can be used to create low-resource translation systems for 16 African languages. |
| Outcome: | The proposed models can translate between hundreds of languages even though there is little parallel data available for training. |