This repository contains:
- the Dutch Abusive Language Corpus v1.0 (DALC v1.0) (folder /v1.0)
- the Dutch Abusive Language Corpus v2.0 (DALC v2.0) (folder /v2.0)
- the data statement related to DALC v1.0 and v2.0 (see below);
- the code of the baseline models that have been developed for DALC v1.0 (folder v1.0/models)
- the code of the baseline models that have been developed for DALC v2.0 (folder v2.0/models)
- a copy of the GrofLex lexicon
- a copy of HateCheck_NL, a functional benchmark for hate speech based on HateCheck (folder /hatecheck-nl)
- fine tune models with BERTje for abusive and offensive language detection (folder /models_fine_tuned)
This work was part of the bachelor thesis in Information Science of the University of Groningen for the academic years 2019/2020 and 2020/2021.
The folders /v1.0/data/ and /v2.0/data contain only an ID and the labels. We make available a full text version of the corpus, DALC full text at the following link https://doi.org/10.34894/HOINL3 via DataverseNL. Access to the full text version is subject to a Data Sharing Agreement.
Data set name: Ducth Abusive Language Corpus v1.0
Citation (if available):
@inproceedings{caselli-etal-2021,
title = "DALC: the Dutch Abusive Language Corpus",
author = "Caselli, Tommaso and Schelhaas, Arjan and Weultjes, Marieke and Leistra, Folkert and van der Veen, Hylke and Timmerman, Gerben and Nissim, Malvina ",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 5th Workshop on Online Abuse and Harms (WOAH)",
month = aug,
year = "2021",
address = "online",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "",
doi = "",
pages = "",
}
Data set developer(s): Marieke Weultjes, Arjan Schelhaas, Folkert Leistra, Hylke van der Veen, Menno Robben, Gerben Timmerman
Data statement author(s): Tommaso Caselli
Others who contributed to this document:
The corpus is composed by tweets in Dutch extracted using different strategies and covering different time windows.
-
Keywords: we have used a cross-platform approach to identify relevant keywords and reduce bias that may be introduced in manual selection of the data. We first identified a time window in Reddit, extracted all posts that received a controversial label. We then identified keywords (unigram) and retained the top 50 keywords per time window. We then used the keywords to extract tweets in corresponding periods. For each time period, we selected a sample 5,000 messages using two dictionaries containing know profanities in Dutch. An additional 5,000 messages are randomly selected. The messages are then re-shuffled and annotated.
-
Geolocation: following Denti and Faggian, 2019 that show the existence of a correlation between hateful messages and disenfranchised and economic poor areas, we selected two geo-graphical areas (Zuid-Holland and Groningen) that according to a 2015 study by the Ducth Buraeu of Statistics (CBS) have the highest unemployement rates of the country. We collected 706,044 tweets posted by users whose location was set to the two target areas. The amount of messages was further filtered by removing noise (i.e., messages containing URLs), dropping to 356,401 tweets. Similarly to the keywords approach, we further filtered 2,500 messages using one profanity dictionary and collected an additional 2,500 randomly.
-
Authors: we looked for seed users, i.e., users that are likely to post/use abusive language in their tweets. We created an ad-hoc list of 67 profanities, swearwords, and slurs and then searched for messages containing any of these elements in a ten-day window in December 2018 (namely 2018-11-12 – 2018-11-22), corresponding to a moment of heated debate in the country about Zwarte Piet. We collected an initial amount of 3,105,833 tweets. We then selected as seed users the top 15, i.e., the top 15 users who most frequently use in their messages any of the 67 keywords. For each of them we further collected a maximum of 100 tweets randomly, summing up to a total of 1390 tweets
Dictionaries used: HADES; HurtLex v1.2
- Time periods: 1) 12-11-2015/22-11-2015 (November 2015 Paris attacks); 2) 07-03-2017/17-03-2017 (2017 Dutch general election); 3) 12-11-2018/22-11-2018 (Intocht Sinterklaas 2018); 4) 2020-08 (Black Lives Matter movement); 5) 2017-04; 6) 2018-06; 7) 2019-05; 2019-09
- BCP-47 language tag: nl
- Language variety description: Netherlands and Belgium (Vlaams)
N/A
Annotator #1: Age: 21; Gender: female; Race/ethnicity: caucasian; Native language: Dutch; Socioeconomic status:n/a Training in linguistics/other relevant discipline: BA in Information science
Annotator #2: Age: 21; Gender: male; Race/ethnicity: caucasian; Native language: Dutch; Socioeconomic status:n/a Training in linguistics/other relevant discipline: BA in Information science
Annotator #3: Age: 21; Gender: male; Race/ethnicity: caucasian; Native language: Dutch; Socioeconomic status:n/a Training in linguistics/other relevant discipline: BA in Information science
Annotator #4: Age: 21; Gender: male; Race/ethnicity: caucasian; Native language: Dutch; Socioeconomic status:n/a Training in linguistics/other relevant discipline: BA in Information science
Annotator #5: Age: 23; Gender: male; Race/ethnicity: caucasian; Native language: Dutch; Socioeconomic status:n/a Training in linguistics/other relevant discipline: BA in Information science
Annotator #6: Age: 24; Gender: male; Race/ethnicity: caucasian; Native language: Dutch; Socioeconomic status:n/a Training in linguistics/other relevant discipline: MA in Information science
N/A
Twitter messages; short messages of max. 280 characters; they may contain multimedia materials, external URL links, and mentions of other users. Time period of collection illustrated in the Curation Rational section.
N/A
Data set name: Ducth Abusive Language Corpus v2.0
Citation (if available):
@inproceedings{ruitenbeek-etal-2022,
title = "“Zo Grof !”: A Comprehensive Corpus for Offensive and Abusive Language in Dutch",
author = "Ruitenbeek, Ward and Zwart, Victor and van der Noord, Robin and Gnezdilov, Zhenja and Caselli, Tommaso ",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 6th Workshop on Online Abuse and Harms (WOAH)",
month = jul,
year = "2022",
address = "Seattle, WA, USA",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "",
doi = "",
pages = "",
}
Data set developer(s): Waard Ruitenbeek, Victor Zwart, Robin van der Noord, Zhenja Gnezdilov
Data statement author(s): Tommaso Caselli
The corpus is composed by tweets in Dutch extracted using different strategies and covering different time windows. The corpus is an extension of DALC v1.0. From DALC v1.0, we have extracted additional messages using the following techniques:
-
Keywords: we have used a cross-platform approach to identify relevant keywords and reduce bias that may be introduced in manual selection of the data. We first identified a time window in Reddit, extracted all posts that received a controversial label. We then identified keywords (unigram) and retained the top 50 keywords per time window. We then used the keywords to extract tweets in corresponding periods. For each time period, we selected a sample 5,000 messages using two dictionaries containing know profanities in Dutch. An additional 5,000 messages are randomly selected. The messages are then re-shuffled and annotated.
-
Authors: we looked for seed users, i.e., users that are likely to post/use abusive language in their tweets. We created an ad-hoc list of 67 profanities, swearwords, and slurs and then searched for messages containing any of these elements in a ten-day window in December 2018 (namely 2018-11-12 – 2018-11-22), corresponding to a moment of heated debate in the country about Zwarte Piet. We collected an initial amount of 3,105,833 tweets. We then selected as seed users the top 15, i.e., the top 15 users who most frequently use in their messages any of the 67 keywords. For each of them we further collected a maximum of 100 tweets randomly, summing up to a total of 1390 tweets
Dictionaries used: HADES; HurtLex v1.2
- Time periods: 1) 12-11-2015/22-11-2015 (November 2015 Paris attacks); 2) 07-03-2017/17-03-2017 (2017 Dutch general election); 3) 12-11-2018/22-11-2018 (Intocht Sinterklaas 2018); 4) 2020-08 (Black Lives Matter movement); 5) 2017-04; 6) 2018-06; 7) 2019-05; 2019-09
- BCP-47 language tag: nl
- Language variety description: Netherlands and Belgium (Vlaams)
N/A
Annotator #1: Age: 20; Gender: male; Race/ethnicity: caucasian; Native language: Dutch; Socioeconomic status:n/a Training in linguistics/other relevant discipline: BA in Information science
Annotator #2: Age: 20; Gender: male; Race/ethnicity: caucasian; Native language: Dutch; Socioeconomic status:n/a Training in linguistics/other relevant discipline: BA in Information science
Annotator #3: Age: 20; Gender: male; Race/ethnicity: caucasian; Native language: Dutch; Socioeconomic status:n/a Training in linguistics/other relevant discipline: BA in Information science
Annotator #4: Age: 20; Gender: male; Race/ethnicity: caucasian; Native language: Dutch; Socioeconomic status:n/a Training in linguistics/other relevant discipline: BA in Information science
N/A
Twitter messages; short messages of max. 280 characters; they may contain multimedia materials, external URL links, and mentions of other users. Time period of collection illustrated in the Curation Rational section.
N/A
Data set name: Dutch Dynamic Test Set; Offend the Politicians Benchmark (OP-NL)
Data set developer(s): Dionysios Theodoridis; Tommaso Caselli
The corpus is composed by tweets in Dutch extracted from a list of politician twitter accounts using information from the Dutch Tweede Kamer (the Dutch House of Representatives) in September 2021. At that time, the Tweede Kamer consisted of 148 politicians from 18 different parties, with 4 parties having more than 10 seats. The list with names and Twitter account is avialble in this repository here.
- Time periods: March 2021.
- BCP-47 language tag: nl
- Language variety description: Netherlands and Belgium (Vlaams)
Annotator #1: Age: 25; Gender: male; Race/ethnicity: caucasian; Native language: Dutch; Socioeconomic status:n/a Training in linguistics/other relevant discipline: BA in Information science
Twitter messages; short messages of max. 280 characters; they may contain multimedia materials, external URL links, and mentions of other users. Time period of collection illustrated in the Curation Rational section.
Citation (if available):
@article{Theodoridis_Caselli_2022,
title={All That Glitters is Not Gold: Transfer-learning for Offensive Language Detection in Dutch},
volume={12},
url={https://www.clinjournal.org/clinj/article/view/152},
abstractNote={<p>Creating datasets for language phenomena to fill gaps in the language resource panorama of specific natural languages is not a trivial task. In this work, we explore the application of transferlearning as strategy to boost both the creation of language-specific datasets and systems. We use offensive language in Dutch tweets directed at Dutch politicians as a case study. In particular, we trained a multilingual model using the Political Speech Project (Bröckling et al. 2018) dataset to automatically annotate tweets in Dutch. The automatically annotated tweets have been used to further train a monolingual language model in Dutch (BERTje) adopting different strategies and combination of manually curated data. Our results show that: (i) transfer learning is an effective strategy to boost the creation of new datasets for specific language phenomena by reducing the annotation efforts; (ii) using a monolingual language model fine-tuned with automatically annotated data (i.e., silver data) is a competitive baseline against the zero-shot transfer of a multilingual model; and finally, (iii) less surprisingly, the addition of automatically annotated data to manually curated ones is a source of errors for the systems, degrading their performances.},
journal={Computational Linguistics in the Netherlands Journal},
author={Theodoridis, Dion and Caselli, Tommaso},
year={2022},
month={Dec.},
pages={141–164} }
A data statement is a characterization of a dataset that provides context to allow developers and users to better understand how experimental results might generalize, how software might be appropriately deployed, and what biases might be reflected in systems built on the software.
Data Statements are from the University of Washington. Contact: datastatements@uw.edu. The markdown Data Statement we used is from June 4th 2020. The Data Statement template is based on worksheets distributed at the 2020 LREC workshop on Data Statements, by Emily M. Bender, Batya Friedman, and Angelina McMillan-Major. Adapted to community Markdown template by Leon Dercyznski.