English

Towards Realistic Practices In Low-Resource Natural Language Processing: The Development Set

Computation and Language 2019-09-17 v2

Abstract

Development sets are impractical to obtain for real low-resource languages, since using all available data for training is often more effective. However, development sets are widely used in research papers that purport to deal with low-resource natural language processing (NLP). Here, we aim to answer the following questions: Does using a development set for early stopping in the low-resource setting influence results as compared to a more realistic alternative, where the number of training epochs is tuned on development languages? And does it lead to overestimation or underestimation of performance? We repeat multiple experiments from recent work on neural models for low-resource NLP and compare results for models obtained by training with and without development sets. On average over languages, absolute accuracy differs by up to 1.4%. However, for some languages and tasks, differences are as big as 18.0% accuracy. Our results highlight the importance of realistic experimental setups in the publication of low-resource NLP research results.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1909.01522,
  title  = {Towards Realistic Practices In Low-Resource Natural Language Processing: The Development Set},
  author = {Katharina Kann and Kyunghyun Cho and Samuel R. Bowman},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1909.01522},
  year   = {2019}
}

Comments

EMNLP 2019

R2 v1 2026-06-23T11:04:46.769Z