Code-Switching Ratio Effects on Zero-Shot Cross-Lingual Document Retrieval Performance in Low-Resource Language Pairs
Description
Transferring information retrieval (IR) models from a high-resource language (typically English) to other languages in a zero-shot fashion has become a widely adopted approach. In this work, we show that the effectiveness of zero-shot rankers diminishes when queries and documents are present in different languages. Motivated by this, we propose to train ranking models on artificially code-switched data instead, which we generate by utilizing bilingual lexicons. To this end, we experiment with lexicons induced from (1) cross-lingual word embeddings and (2) parallel Wikipedia page titles. We use
Research goal: How does varying the code-switching ratio in artificially generated training data influence the zero-shot cross-lingual document retrieval performance on the XLM-R benchmark for low-resource language pairs?
Autonomous synthesis report generated by Assignee Research. Tribunal consensus score: 8.1/10.
Notes
Files
paper.pdf
Files
(87.6 kB)
| Name | Size | Download all |
|---|---|---|
|
md5:a7a78b6ce698419b7442b6fabefdf664
|
87.6 kB | Preview Download |