PyAnnotation - a linguistic annotation library for Python


Description

PyAnnotation is a Python Library to access and manipulate linguistically annotated corpus files. Supported file format is currently only Elan XML, with Kura XML and Toolbox files support planned for future releases. A Corpus Reader API is provided to support statistical analysis within the Natural Language Toolkit.
The software is licensed under the GNU General Public License.

Requirements

You need to install the following packages:

Download

Installation

To install PyAnnotation on Windows just start the .exe file you downloaded and follow the instructions in the setup process.
To install PyAnnotation on Linux, Unix and other platforms you need to unpack the file and start "setup.py" on the command line. Change to the directory into which you downloaded the package and unpack it:

$ tar xzf pyannotation-x.y.z.tar.gz
$ cd pyannotation-x.y.z

Then, to install the package locally into your python repository (you may need to have root privileges):

$ python setup.py install

The installation process will give you feedback and should finish without errors.

Basic usage

Here are a few examples what you can do with PyAnnotation. All the examples process Elan files which are stored in one directory, the directory here is "example_data" which is part of the source package. The package also contains a sample script "example1.py" that runs all the commands presented here, so you might just call "python example1.py" and see all the results on your own computer at once.

Here is a direct download for the sample files: example1.py and turkish.eaf.

First, start a python interpreter and import pyanntation for Elan:

$ python
Python 2.6.2 (release26-maint, Apr 19 2009, 01:56:41) 
[GCC 4.3.3] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> import pyannotation.elan.data

Then load the directory into the corpus reader. You can provide your own directory here, the corpus reader reads in all .eaf files in the directory:

>>> cr = pyannotation.elan.data.EafGlossCorpusReader('example_data')

(Note: there is also a class "EafPosCorpusReader" to access "part of speech" tags and a class "EafCorpusReader" to access utterances and words only, without any further annotations. Just try out the next few example lines with those classes, too.)

To get all sentences with their tags that have a gloss "ANOM" (here: tags are morphemes and their glosses stored in a kind of tree):

>>> result = [s for s in cr.tagged_sents() for (word, tag) in s
...             for (morphem, gloss) in tag
...             if 'ANOM' in gloss and s not in locals()['_[1]']]
>>> print result
[[('eve', [('ev', ['home']), ('e', ['DIR'])]), ('geldi\xc4\x9fimde', ...

Only the sentences of the result:

>>>sents = [[w for (w, t) in s] for s in result]
>>> print sents
[['eve', 'geldi\xc4\x9fimde', 'ya\xc4\x9fmur',  ...

A word list from the result:

>>> tagged_words = [(w,t) for s in result for (w, t) in s]
>>> print tagged_words
[('eve', [('ev', ['home']), ('e', ['DIR'])]), ('geldi\xc4\x9fimde', ...

A list of morphemes and their tags from the result:

>>> tagged_morphemes = [(m,g) for s in result for (w,t) in s for (m,g) in t]
>>> print tagged_morphemes
[('ev', ['home']), ('e', ['DIR']), ('gel', ['come']), ('di\xc4\x9f', ...

Another query: find all sentences that contain a certain word (here: "home") in their translation:

>>> import re
>>> result2 = [(s, translations) 
...            for (s, translations) in cr.tagged_sents_with_translations() 
...            for t in translations if re.search(r"\bhome\b", t)]
>>> print result2
[([('d\xc3\xbcn', [('d\xc3\xbcn', ['yesterday'])]), ('ak\xc5\x9fam', ...

And, last but not least, use your Elan corpus with NLTK. An example to get the concordance for the word "bir" (turkish for "one"):

>>> import nltk.text
>>> text = nltk.text.Text(cr.words())
>>> text.concordance('bir') # find concordance for turkish "bir"
Building index...
Displaying 2 of 2 matches:
 daha rahat ederdim çünkü içimden bir ses yeter artık çalışma derken bi
ir ses yeter artık çalışma derken bir diğer ses de çalışmam gerektiğin

Just try it out for yourself what you can do with the data. PyAnnotation's corpus reader for .eaf files has the following access methods for data:

# I{corpus}.mophemes()
# I{corpus}.words()
# I{corpus}.sents()
# I{corpus}.sents_with_translations()

# I{corpus}.tagged_morphemes()
# I{corpus}.tagged_words()
# I{corpus}.tagged_sents()
# I{corpus}.tagged_sents_with_translations()

To find out more about corpus readers you might want to read the HOWTO at NLTK. Note that PyAnnotation does not implement the full API described there!

Documentation

The documentation is far from complete, but here it is anyway...

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Inhalt unter Creative Commons License | (C) 2010 by Peter Bouda