Datasets:
metadata
language:
- de
- en
- es
- fr
- it
- nl
- pl
- pt
- ru
multilinguality:
- multilingual
size_categories:
- <10K
task_categories:
- token-classification
task_ids:
- named-entity-recognition
pretty_name: MultiNERD
Dataset Card for "tner/multinerd"
Dataset Description
- Repository: T-NER
- Paper: https://aclanthology.org/2022.findings-naacl.60/
- Dataset: MultiNERD
- Domain: Wikipedia, WikiNews
- Number of Entity: 18
Dataset Summary
MultiNERD NER benchmark dataset formatted in a part of TNER project.
- Entity Types:
PER
,LOC
,ORG
,ANIM
,BIO
,CEL
,DIS
,EVE
,FOOD
,INST
,MEDIA
,PLANT
,MYTH
,TIME
,VEHI
,MISC
,SUPER
,PHY
Dataset Structure
Data Instances
An example of train
of de
looks as follows.
{
'tokens': [ "Die", "Blätter", "des", "Huflattichs", "sind", "leicht", "mit", "den", "sehr", "ähnlichen", "Blättern", "der", "Weißen", "Pestwurz", "(", "\"", "Petasites", "albus", "\"", ")", "zu", "verwechseln", "." ],
'tags': [ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 2, 0, 0, 0 ]
}
Label ID
The label2id dictionary can be found at here.
{
"O": 0,
"B-PER": 1,
"I-PER": 2,
"B-LOC": 3,
"I-LOC": 4,
"B-ORG": 5,
"I-ORG": 6,
"B-ANIM": 7,
"I-ANIM": 8,
"B-BIO": 9,
"I-BIO": 10,
"B-CEL": 11,
"I-CEL": 12,
"B-DIS": 13,
"I-DIS": 14,
"B-EVE": 15,
"I-EVE": 16,
"B-FOOD": 17,
"I-FOOD": 18,
"B-INST": 19,
"I-INST": 20,
"B-MEDIA": 21,
"I-MEDIA": 22,
"B-PLANT": 23,
"I-PLANT": 24,
"B-MYTH": 25,
"I-MYTH": 26,
"B-TIME": 27,
"I-TIME": 28,
"B-VEHI": 29,
"I-VEHI": 30,
"B-SUPER": 31,
"I-SUPER": 32,
"B-PHY": 33,
"I-PHY": 34
}
Data Splits
language | test |
---|---|
de | 156792 |
en | 164144 |
es | 173189 |
fr | 176185 |
it | 181927 |
nl | 171711 |
pl | 194965 |
pt | 177565 |
ru | 82858 |
Citation Information
@inproceedings{tedeschi-navigli-2022-multinerd,
title = "{M}ulti{NERD}: A Multilingual, Multi-Genre and Fine-Grained Dataset for Named Entity Recognition (and Disambiguation)",
author = "Tedeschi, Simone and
Navigli, Roberto",
booktitle = "Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: NAACL 2022",
month = jul,
year = "2022",
address = "Seattle, United States",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://aclanthology.org/2022.findings-naacl.60",
doi = "10.18653/v1/2022.findings-naacl.60",
pages = "801--812",
abstract = "Named Entity Recognition (NER) is the task of identifying named entities in texts and classifying them through specific semantic categories, a process which is crucial for a wide range of NLP applications. Current datasets for NER focus mainly on coarse-grained entity types, tend to consider a single textual genre and to cover a narrow set of languages, thus limiting the general applicability of NER systems.In this work, we design a new methodology for automatically producing NER annotations, and address the aforementioned limitations by introducing a novel dataset that covers 10 languages, 15 NER categories and 2 textual genres.We also introduce a manually-annotated test set, and extensively evaluate the quality of our novel dataset on both this new test set and standard benchmarks for NER.In addition, in our dataset, we include: i) disambiguation information to enable the development of multilingual entity linking systems, and ii) image URLs to encourage the creation of multimodal systems.We release our dataset at https://github.com/Babelscape/multinerd.",
}