Towards zero-shot cross-lingual named entity disambiguation

[EN]In cross-Lingual Named Entity Disambiguation (XNED) the task is to link Named Entity mentions in text in some native language to English entities in a knowledge graph. XNED systems usually require training data for each native language, limiting their application for low resource languages with...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores: Barrena Madinabeitia, Ander, Soroa Echave, Aitor, Agirre Bengoa, Eneko
Tipo de recurso: artículo
Fecha de publicación:2021
País:España
Institución:Universidad del País Vasco
Repositorio:Addi. Archivo Digital para la Docencia y la Investigación
OAI Identifier:oai:addi.ehu.eus:10810/54482
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/10810/54482
Access Level:acceso abierto
Palabra clave:cross-lingual named entity disambiguation
cross-lingual entity linking
zero-shot learning
transfer learning
pre-trained language models
low-resource languages
Descripción
Sumario:[EN]In cross-Lingual Named Entity Disambiguation (XNED) the task is to link Named Entity mentions in text in some native language to English entities in a knowledge graph. XNED systems usually require training data for each native language, limiting their application for low resource languages with small amounts of training data. Prior work have proposed so-called zero-shot transfer systems which are only trained in English training data, but required native prior probabilities of entities with respect to mentions, which had to be estimated from native training examples, limiting their practical interest. In this work we present a zero-shot XNED architecture where, instead of a single disambiguation model, we have a model for each possible mention string, thus eliminating the need for native prior probabilities. Our system improves over prior work in XNED datasets in Spanish and Chinese by 32 and 27 points, and matches the systems which do require native prior information. We experiment with different multilingual transfer strategies, showing that better results are obtained with a purpose-built multilingual pre-training method compared to state-of-the-art generic multilingual models such as XLM-R. We also discovered, surprisingly, that English is not necessarily the most effective zero-shot training language for XNED into English. For instance, Spanish is more effective when training a zero-shot XNED system that dis-ambiguates Basque mentions with respect to an English knowledge graph.