Miguel Domingo Ballester
Historical documents are an important part of our cultural heritage. However,due to the language barrier inherent in human language and the linguistic properties of these documents, their accessibility is mostly limited to scholars. On the one hand, human language evolves with the passage of time. On the other hand, spelling conventions were not created until recently and, thus, orthography changes depending on the time period and author. For these reasons, the work of scholars is needed for non-experts to gain a basic understanding of a given document.
In this thesis, we tackle two tasks related with the processing of historical documents. The first task is language modernization which, in order to make historical documents more accessible to non-experts, aims to rewrite a document using the modern version of the document's original language. The second task is spelling normalization. The aforementioned linguistic properties of historical documents suppose an additional challenge for the effective natural language processing of these documents. Thus, this task aims to adapt a document's spelling to modern standards in order to achieve an orthography consistency.
We affront both task from a machine translation perspective, considering a document's original language as the source language, and its modern/normalized counterpart as the target language. We propose several approaches based on statistical and neural machine translation, and carry out a wide experimentation that shows the potential of our contributions¿with the statistical approaches yielding equal or better results than the neural approaches in most of the cases. For the language modernization task, this experimentation includes a human evaluation conducted with the help of scholars and a user study that verifies that our proposals are able to help non-experts to gain a basic understanding of a historical document without the intervention of a scholar.
As with any machine translation problem, our applications are not error-free. Thus, to obtain perfect modernizations/normalizations, a scholar needs to supervise and correct the errors. This is a common procedure in the translation industry. The interactive machine translation framework aims to reduce the effort needed for obtaining high quality translations by embedding the human agent and the translation system into a cooperative correction process. However, most interactive protocols follow a left-to-right strategy. In this thesis, we developed a new interactive protocol that breaks this left-to-right barrier. We evaluated this new protocol in a machine translation environment, obtaining large reductions of the human effort. Finally, since this interactive framework is of general application to any translation problem, we applied it¿our new protocol together with one of the classic left-to-right protocols¿to language modernization and spelling normalization. As with machine translation, the interactive framework diminished the effort required for correcting the outputs of an automatic system.
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