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Autores principales: Amol, Cynthia Jayne, Chimoto, Everlyn Asiko, Gesicho, Rose Delilah, Gitau, Antony M., Etori, Naome A., Kinyanjui, Caringtone, Ndung'u, Steven, Moruye, Lawrence, Ooko, Samson Otieno, Kitonga, Kavengi, Muhia, Brian, Gitau, Catherine, Ndolo, Antony, Wanzare, Lilian D. A., Kahira, Albert Njoroge, Tombe, Ronald
Formato: Preprint
Publicado: 2024
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Acceso en línea:https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.09948
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author Amol, Cynthia Jayne
Chimoto, Everlyn Asiko
Gesicho, Rose Delilah
Gitau, Antony M.
Etori, Naome A.
Kinyanjui, Caringtone
Ndung'u, Steven
Moruye, Lawrence
Ooko, Samson Otieno
Kitonga, Kavengi
Muhia, Brian
Gitau, Catherine
Ndolo, Antony
Wanzare, Lilian D. A.
Kahira, Albert Njoroge
Tombe, Ronald
author_facet Amol, Cynthia Jayne
Chimoto, Everlyn Asiko
Gesicho, Rose Delilah
Gitau, Antony M.
Etori, Naome A.
Kinyanjui, Caringtone
Ndung'u, Steven
Moruye, Lawrence
Ooko, Samson Otieno
Kitonga, Kavengi
Muhia, Brian
Gitau, Catherine
Ndolo, Antony
Wanzare, Lilian D. A.
Kahira, Albert Njoroge
Tombe, Ronald
contents Kenya, known for its linguistic diversity, faces unique challenges and promising opportunities in advancing Natural Language Processing (NLP) technologies, particularly for its underrepresented indigenous languages. This survey provides a detailed assessment of the current state of NLP in Kenya, emphasizing ongoing efforts in dataset creation, machine translation, sentiment analysis, and speech recognition for local dialects such as Kiswahili, Dholuo, Kikuyu, and Luhya. Despite these advancements, the development of NLP in Kenya remains constrained by limited resources and tools, resulting in the underrepresentation of most indigenous languages in digital spaces. This paper uncovers significant gaps by critically evaluating the available datasets and existing NLP models, most notably the need for large-scale language models and the insufficient digital representation of Indigenous languages. We also analyze key NLP applications: machine translation, information retrieval, and sentiment analysis-examining how they are tailored to address local linguistic needs. Furthermore, the paper explores the governance, policies, and regulations shaping the future of AI and NLP in Kenya and proposes a strategic roadmap to guide future research and development efforts. Our goal is to provide a foundation for accelerating the growth of NLP technologies that meet Kenya's diverse linguistic demands.
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spellingShingle State of NLP in Kenya: A Survey
Amol, Cynthia Jayne
Chimoto, Everlyn Asiko
Gesicho, Rose Delilah
Gitau, Antony M.
Etori, Naome A.
Kinyanjui, Caringtone
Ndung'u, Steven
Moruye, Lawrence
Ooko, Samson Otieno
Kitonga, Kavengi
Muhia, Brian
Gitau, Catherine
Ndolo, Antony
Wanzare, Lilian D. A.
Kahira, Albert Njoroge
Tombe, Ronald
Computation and Language
Artificial Intelligence
Kenya, known for its linguistic diversity, faces unique challenges and promising opportunities in advancing Natural Language Processing (NLP) technologies, particularly for its underrepresented indigenous languages. This survey provides a detailed assessment of the current state of NLP in Kenya, emphasizing ongoing efforts in dataset creation, machine translation, sentiment analysis, and speech recognition for local dialects such as Kiswahili, Dholuo, Kikuyu, and Luhya. Despite these advancements, the development of NLP in Kenya remains constrained by limited resources and tools, resulting in the underrepresentation of most indigenous languages in digital spaces. This paper uncovers significant gaps by critically evaluating the available datasets and existing NLP models, most notably the need for large-scale language models and the insufficient digital representation of Indigenous languages. We also analyze key NLP applications: machine translation, information retrieval, and sentiment analysis-examining how they are tailored to address local linguistic needs. Furthermore, the paper explores the governance, policies, and regulations shaping the future of AI and NLP in Kenya and proposes a strategic roadmap to guide future research and development efforts. Our goal is to provide a foundation for accelerating the growth of NLP technologies that meet Kenya's diverse linguistic demands.
title State of NLP in Kenya: A Survey
topic Computation and Language
Artificial Intelligence
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.09948