English

Examining Language Modeling Assumptions Using an Annotated Literary Dialect Corpus

Computation and Language 2026-02-18 v1

Abstract

We present a dataset of 19th century American literary orthovariant tokens with a novel layer of human-annotated dialect group tags designed to serve as the basis for computational experiments exploring literarily meaningful orthographic variation. We perform an initial broad set of experiments over this dataset using both token (BERT) and character (CANINE)-level contextual language models. We find indications that the "dialect effect" produced by intentional orthographic variation employs multiple linguistic channels, and that these channels are able to be surfaced to varied degrees given particular language modelling assumptions. Specifically, we find evidence showing that choice of tokenization scheme meaningfully impact the type of orthographic information a model is able to surface.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2410.02674,
  title  = {Examining Language Modeling Assumptions Using an Annotated Literary Dialect Corpus},
  author = {Craig Messner and Tom Lippincott},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2410.02674},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

Accepted to NLP4DH@EMNLP2024

R2 v1 2026-06-28T19:07:20.097Z