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---
license: eupl-1.1
task_categories:
- token-classification
language:
- cs
- de
- en
- fr
- hu
- nl
- pl
- sk
- yi
tags:
- Holocaust
- EHRI
pretty_name: EHRI-NER
size_categories:
- 100K<n<1M
---
# Dataset Card for ehri-ner/ehri-ner-all
<!-- Provide a quick summary of the dataset. -->
The European Holocaust Research Infrastructure (EHRI) aims to support Holocaust research by making information about dispersed Holocaust material accessible and interconnected through its services. Creating a tool capable of detecting named entities in texts such as Holocaust testimonies or archival descriptions would make it easier to link more material with relevant identifiers in domain-specific controlled vocabularies, semantically enriching it, and making it more discoverable. The EHRI-NER dataset is a multilingual dataset (Czech, German, English, French, Hungarian, Dutch, Polish, Slovak, Yiddish) suitable for training domain-specific Named Entity Recognition (NER) models for Holocaust-related texts.
We have converted all available Extensible Markup Language (XML) files from the EHRI digital scholarly editions (i.e., EHRI Online Editions) into a corpus in a format suitable for training NER models.
## Dataset Details
The EHRI-NER dataset includes a total of
505758 tokens, with 5351 person entities, 9399
location entities, 1867 organization entities, 2237
date entities, 528 ghetto entities, and 1229 camp
entities.
### Dataset Description
<!-- Provide a longer summary of what this dataset is. -->
Since 2018, the EHRI Consortium has supported
the development and publication of six
Holocaust-related digital scholarly editions (see [here](https://www.ehri-project.eu/ehri-online-editions)).
Each edition enables digital access to facsimiles
and transcripts of thematically related documents
held by different EHRI partner institutions
through a single web interface and unlocks new
ways of presenting and browsing through historical
sources using digital tools. Publishing a digital
edition is a resource-intensive process. Notwithstanding
the extensive archival research needed
for selecting the documents, additional steps include
transcribing and translating them and, most
importantly, annotating words and phrases found
within these texts and creating links with entities in
controlled vocabularies provided by EHRI and third
parties. Currently, this annotation is done manually
by or under the supervision of subject matter experts,
ensuring a high quality of annotations. We
repurposed these resources to convert them into
a dataset suitable for training NER models, which
we consider as a gold standard.
Each EHRI Online Edition consists of digitized
documents originating from various archives that
are selected, edited, and annotated by EHRI researchers
using the Text Encoding Initiative (TEI)
P5 standard, an XML
schema, which supports their online publication.
Editions enhance the edited documents by contextualizing
the information contained within them and
linking them to EHRI vocabularies and descriptions,
and by visualizing georeferenced entities through
interactive maps. Thanks to their encoding in TEI,
they are fully searchable and can be filtered using
facets such as spatial locations, topics, persons, organizations,
and institutions. All documents within
an edition have a transcript, either in their original
language, a translation, or both, and have access
to their facsimile. EHRI Editions are published without
a regular schedule and it is possible to update
them with new material or improve the already published
documents.
The resulting EHRI-NER
dataset includes nine languages: Czech (cs),
German (de), English (en), French (fr), Hungarian
(hu), Dutch (nl), Polish (pl), Slovak (sk), and Yiddish
(yi).
### Annotation format
Each word has been put on a separate line and there is an empty line after each sentence.
The annotations follow the conll2003 format (IOB).
### Entity Classes
PER, LOC, ORG, DATE, CAMP, GHETTO
- **Curated by:** EHRI
- **Funded by:** European Commission call H2020-INFRAIA-2018–2020. Grant agreement ID 871111. DOI 10.3030/871111.
- **Shared by:** Dermentzi, M. & Scheithauer, H.
- **Language(s) (NLP):** cs, de, en, fr, hu, nl, pl, sk, yi
- **License:** EUPL-1.2
### Dataset Sources
- **Repository:** https://github.com/EHRI/EHRI-NER
- **Paper:** https://hal.science/hal-04547222
## Uses
<!-- Address questions around how the dataset is intended to be used. -->
EHRI-NER is a multilingual dataset (Czech, German, English,
French, Hungarian, Dutch, Polish, Slovak, Yiddish) for Named Entity Recognition (NER) in Holocaust-related texts.
EHRI-NER is built by aggregating all the annotated documents in the EHRI Online Editions and converting them into a
format suitable for training domain-specific NER models.
### Source Data
<!-- This section describes the source data (e.g. news text and headlines, social media posts, translated sentences, ...). -->
This dataset is derived from the EHRI Online Editions, a series of six Holocaust-related digital scholarly editions (more info [here](https://www.ehri-project.eu/ehri-online-editions)).
#### Who are the source data producers?
<!-- This section describes the people or systems who originally created the data. It should also include self-reported demographic or identity information for the source data creators if this information is available. -->
This dataset
was made possible thanks to the previous work
of the editors and contributors of the EHRI Online
Editions, including the annotators, the people who
produced digital facsimiles of the original archival
material, and those who created the transcripts
and translations.
## Limitations
<!-- This section is meant to convey both technical and sociotechnical limitations. -->
This dataset stems from a series of manually annotated
digital scholarly editions, the EHRI Online Editions. The original purpose
of these editions was not to provide a dataset
for training NER models, although we argue that they nevertheless
constitute a high-quality resource that is
suitable to be used in this way. However, users should still be mindful that
our dataset repurposes a resource that was not built for purpose.
This dataset was put together as part of an EHRI-specific research project and may not be suitable for the purposes of other users/organizations.
### Recommendations
For more information, we encourage potential users to read the paper accompanying this dataset:
Dermentzi, M., & Scheithauer, H. (2024, May). Repurposing Holocaust-Related Digital Scholarly Editions to Develop Multilingual Domain-Specific Named Entity Recognition Tools. LREC-COLING 2024 - Joint International Conference on Computational Linguistics, Language Resources and Evaluation. HTRes@LREC-COLING 2024, Torino, Italy. https://hal.science/hal-04547222
## Citation
**BibTeX:**
@inproceedings{dermentzi_repurposing_2024,
address = {Torino, Italy},
title = {Repurposing {Holocaust}-{Related} {Digital} {Scholarly} {Editions} to {Develop} {Multilingual} {Domain}-{Specific} {Named} {Entity} {Recognition} {Tools}},
url = {https://hal.science/hal-04547222},
abstract = {The European Holocaust Research Infrastructure (EHRI) aims to support Holocaust research by making information about dispersed Holocaust material accessible and interconnected through its services. Creating a tool capable of detecting named entities in texts such as Holocaust testimonies or archival descriptions would make it easier to link more material with relevant identifiers in domain-specific controlled vocabularies, semantically enriching it, and making it more discoverable. With this paper, we release EHRI-NER, a multilingual dataset (Czech, German, English, French, Hungarian, Dutch, Polish, Slovak, Yiddish) for Named Entity Recognition (NER) in Holocaust-related texts. EHRI-NER is built by aggregating all the annotated documents in the EHRI Online Editions and converting them to a format suitable for training NER models. We leverage this dataset to fine-tune the multilingual Transformer-based language model XLM-RoBERTa (XLM-R) to determine whether a single model can be trained to recognize entities across different document types and languages. The results of our experiments show that despite our relatively small dataset, in a multilingual experiment setup, the overall F1 score achieved by XLM-R fine-tuned on multilingual annotations is 81.5{\textbackslash}\%. We argue that this score is sufficiently high to consider the next steps towards deploying this model.},
urldate = {2024-04-29},
booktitle = {{LREC}-{COLING} 2024 - {Joint} {International} {Conference} on {Computational} {Linguistics}, {Language} {Resources} and {Evaluation}},
publisher = {ELRA Language Resources Association (ELRA); International Committee on Computational Linguistics (ICCL)},
author = {Dermentzi, Maria and Scheithauer, Hugo},
month = may,
year = {2024},
keywords = {Digital Editions, Holocaust Testimonies, Multilingual, Named Entity Recognition, Transfer Learning, Transformers},
}
**APA:**
Dermentzi, M., & Scheithauer, H. (2024, May). Repurposing Holocaust-Related Digital Scholarly Editions to Develop Multilingual Domain-Specific Named Entity Recognition Tools. LREC-COLING 2024 - Joint International Conference on Computational Linguistics, Language Resources and Evaluation. HTRes@LREC-COLING 2024, Torino, Italy. https://hal.science/hal-04547222 |