Automated Transcription of Non-Latin Script Periodicals: A Case Study in the Ottoman Turkish Print Archive
This addresses the exclusion of non-Latin script historical texts from digitization efforts, enabling access for contemporary Turkish readers, though it is incremental in applying existing methods to a specific domain.
The study tackled automated transcription of Arabic script Ottoman Turkish periodicals into Latin script using deep learning on the Transkribus platform, achieving results from HTR experiments on two early twentieth-century periodicals.
Our study utilizes deep learning methods for the automated transcription of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century periodicals written in Arabic script Ottoman Turkish (OT) using the Transkribus platform. We discuss the historical situation of OT text collections and how they were excluded for the most part from the late twentieth century corpora digitization that took place in many Latin script languages. This exclusion has two basic reasons: the technical challenges of OCR for Arabic script languages, and the rapid abandonment of that very script in the Turkish historical context. In the specific case of OT, opening periodical collections to digital tools require training HTR models to generate transcriptions in the Latin writing system of contemporary readers of Turkish, and not, as some may expect, in right-to-left Arabic script text. In the paper we discuss the challenges of training such models where one-to-one correspondence between the writing systems do not exist, and we report results based on our HTR experiments with two OT periodicals from the early twentieth century. Finally, we reflect on potential domain bias of HTR models in historical languages exhibiting spatio-temporal variance as well as the significance of working between writing systems for language communities that have experienced language reform and script change.