Amogh Thakurdesai

CL
h-index3
3papers
18citations
Novelty27%
AI Score33

3 Papers

CLNov 26, 2024Code
On Limitations of LLM as Annotator for Low Resource Languages

Suramya Jadhav, Abhay Shanbhag, Amogh Thakurdesai et al.

Low-resource languages face significant challenges due to the lack of sufficient linguistic data, resources, and tools for tasks such as supervised learning, annotation, and classification. This shortage hinders the development of accurate models and datasets, making it difficult to perform critical NLP tasks like sentiment analysis or hate speech detection. To bridge this gap, Large Language Models (LLMs) present an opportunity for potential annotators, capable of generating datasets and resources for these underrepresented languages. In this paper, we focus on Marathi, a low-resource language, and evaluate the performance of both closed-source and open-source LLMs as annotators, while also comparing these results with fine-tuned BERT models. We assess models such as GPT-4o and Gemini 1.0 Pro, Gemma 2 (2B and 9B), and Llama 3.1 (8B and 405B) on classification tasks including sentiment analysis, news classification, and hate speech detection. Our findings reveal that while LLMs excel in annotation tasks for high-resource languages like English, they still fall short when applied to Marathi. Even advanced models like GPT-4o and Llama 3.1 405B underperform compared to fine-tuned BERT-based baselines, with GPT-4o and Llama 3.1 405B trailing fine-tuned BERT by accuracy margins of 10.2% and 14.1%, respectively. This highlights the limitations of LLMs as annotators for low-resource languages.

CLAug 24, 2025Code
MahaParaphrase: A Marathi Paraphrase Detection Corpus and BERT-based Models

Suramya Jadhav, Abhay Shanbhag, Amogh Thakurdesai et al.

Paraphrases are a vital tool to assist language understanding tasks such as question answering, style transfer, semantic parsing, and data augmentation tasks. Indic languages are complex in natural language processing (NLP) due to their rich morphological and syntactic variations, diverse scripts, and limited availability of annotated data. In this work, we present the L3Cube-MahaParaphrase Dataset, a high-quality paraphrase corpus for Marathi, a low resource Indic language, consisting of 8,000 sentence pairs, each annotated by human experts as either Paraphrase (P) or Non-paraphrase (NP). We also present the results of standard transformer-based BERT models on these datasets. The dataset and model are publicly shared at https://github.com/l3cube-pune/MarathiNLP

CLNov 26, 2024
Non-Contextual BERT or FastText? A Comparative Analysis

Abhay Shanbhag, Suramya Jadhav, Amogh Thakurdesai et al.

Natural Language Processing (NLP) for low-resource languages, which lack large annotated datasets, faces significant challenges due to limited high-quality data and linguistic resources. The selection of embeddings plays a critical role in achieving strong performance in NLP tasks. While contextual BERT embeddings require a full forward pass, non-contextual BERT embeddings rely only on table lookup. Existing research has primarily focused on contextual BERT embeddings, leaving non-contextual embeddings largely unexplored. In this study, we analyze the effectiveness of non-contextual embeddings from BERT models (MuRIL and MahaBERT) and FastText models (IndicFT and MahaFT) for tasks such as news classification, sentiment analysis, and hate speech detection in one such low-resource language Marathi. We compare these embeddings with their contextual and compressed variants. Our findings indicate that non-contextual BERT embeddings extracted from the model's first embedding layer outperform FastText embeddings, presenting a promising alternative for low-resource NLP.