With the popularity of social media, communications through blogs, Facebook, Twitter, and other plat-forms have increased. Initially, English was the only medium of communication. Fortunately, now we can communicate in any language. It has led to people using English and their own native or mother tongue language in a mixed form. Sometimes, comments in other languages have English transliterated format or other cases; people use the intended language scripts. Identifying sentiments and offensive content from such code mixed tweets is a necessary task in these times. We present a working model submitted for Task2 of the sub-track HASOC Offensive Language Identification- DravidianCodeMix in Forum for Information Retrieval Evaluation, 2020. It is a message level classification task. An embedding model-based classifier identifies offensive and not offensive comments in our approach. We applied this method in the Manglish dataset provided along with the sub-track.
This paper presents a novel approach to recognize Grantha, an ancient script in South India and converting it to Malayalam, a prevalent language in South India using online character recognition mechanism. The motivation behind this work owes its credit to (i) developing a mechanism to recognize Grantha script in this modern world and (ii) affirming the strong connection among Grantha and Malayalam. A framework for the recognition of Grantha script using online character recognition is designed and implemented. The features extracted from the Grantha script comprises mainly of time-domain features based on writing direction and curvature. The recognized characters are mapped to corresponding Malayalam characters. The framework was tested on a bed of medium length manuscripts containing 9-12 sample lines and printed pages of a book titled Soundarya Lahari writtenin Grantha by Sri Adi Shankara to recognize the words and sentences. The manuscript recognition rates with the system are for Grantha as 92.11%, Old Malayalam 90.82% and for new Malayalam script 89.56%. The recognition rates of pages of the printed book are for Grantha as 96.16%, Old Malayalam script 95.22% and new Malayalam script as 92.32% respectively. These results show the efficiency of the developed system.