Skip to main content

MFTE (Multi Feature Tagger of English) Python is the Python version based on Le Foll's MFTE written in Perl. It is extended to include semantic tags from Biber (2006) and Biber et al. (1999), including other specific tags.

Project description

Multi-Feature Tagger of English (MFTE)

The MFTE is a Python version of the extended Multi-Feature Tagger of English (MFTE) based on Le Foll's (2021) version of the MFTE written in Perl. This improved and extended Python version includes semantic tags from Biber (2006) and Biber et al. (1999), as well as many additional tags. This tagger uses the Python NLP library stanza for grammatical part-of-speech tagging before applying rule-based regular expressions to tag for a range of more complex lexico-grammatical and semantic features typically used in multidimensional analysis (MDA; cf. Biber 1984; 1988).

Installation

Standalone executeable (GUI) for Windows (updated 1-06-2023)

The GUI version for Windows can be downloaded as a single executable from the following link:

GUI version for Windows.

There is no need to install anything else.

Command-line installation using Anaconda

To use this software, you must first install Python. We recommend that you install Python using anaconda (video tutorial for Windows, video tutorial for Mac). Then install the MFTE using the following command on Anaconda Terminal in Windows, Mac, or Linux:

pip install MFTE

Afterwards you can run MFTE from the same terminal window: MFTE for command-line and MFTE_gui for the GUI (graphical user interface) version.

Optional installation of GPU support (especially useful for large corpora)

If you have an nVidia GPU in your system (Windows or Linux), you can install GPU support by installing CUDA enabled Pytorch (the framework stanza uses under the hood):

For Windows: pip3 install torch torchvision torchaudio --index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu118

For Linux: pip3 install torch torchvision torchaudio --index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu118

For MacOS 12.3+ MPS acceleration is available through nightly builds. Run the following command to update pytorch: pip3 install --pre torch torchvision torchaudio --index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/nightly/cpu

Usage

Usage of the GUI version

To launch the GUI version on Linux or MacOS, simply call up MFTE_gui in the Anaconda terminal.

The usage of the MFTE using the GUI is straightforward as the screenshot below shows. Additional information about each option is available in tooltips. Simply hover your mouse over a checkbox or button to find out more about each option. The MFTE Python includes a simple and an extended tagset. By default, the extended tagset is used (see feature descriptions). By default, type-token-ratios (TTR) are calculated on the basis of the first 400 words of each text. This number should not be fewer than the shortest text in your corpus if you wish to use this feature in your analyses.

MFTE

Simply check or uncheck the options you require and then open the folder which contains your text files by clicking on the Select corpus directory button. As soon as you click OK, the software begins with the part-of-speech (POS) tagging and later with the MFTE tags. The output is generated in a new folder which preserves the name of the original folder complemented by _MFTE as a suffix (see Outputs).

Usage of the command-line version

The mfte script takes the following optional arguments, which you can change as you like:

Argument Explanation
--path 'path\to\corpus' path to the text files folder
--ttr 400 By default, type-token-ratios (TTR) are calculated on the basis of the first 400 words of each text. So default is 400
--extended True The MFTE Python includes a simple and an extended tagset so use True or False; by default it is enabled using True
--parallel_md_tagging False enable MD tagging of multiple files at the same time (high CPU usage) True or False; default is False

The complete command will look like this:

mfte --path "/path/to/corpus/" --ttr 400 --extended True --parallel_md_tagging False

Feature descriptions

The MFTE Python tags over 100 lexico-grammatical and semantic features. Please refer to the List_Features_MFTE_python_1.0.0.xlsx and the Wiki for details (work in progress).

Further information can be be found in Introducing the MFTE Perl, a 50-page document based on revised, selected chapters from an M.Sc. thesis submitted for the degree of Master of Science in Cognitive Science at the Institute of Cognitive Science, Osnabrück University (Germany) in November 2021. It outlines the steps involved in the development of the Perl MFTE. Section 2.1 outlines its specifications, which were drawn up on the basis of the features needed to carry out MDA and taking account of the advantages and limitations of existing taggers. The following sections explain the methodological decisions involved in the selection of the features to be identified by the MFTE (2.2), the details of the regular expressions used to identify these features (2.3) and the procedure for normalising the feature counts (2.4). Section 2.5 describes the outputs of the tagger. Chapter 3 presents the method and results of an evaluation of the accuracy of the MFTE. It reports the results of comparisons of the tags assigned by the MFTE and by two human annotators to calculate precision and recall rates for each linguistic feature across a range of contrasting text registers. The data and code used to analyse the evaluation results are also available in the corresponding GitHub repository.

Outputs

The [prefix]_MFTE output folder contains three subfolders: MFTE_Tagged, POS_Tagged and Statistics. The first two folders contain the tagged texts with which you can check the accuracy of the tagging process. The Statistics folder is your go-to folder to further analyses. It contains feature counts in the form of comma-separated-values files (.csv). Each row corresponds to a text file from the corpus tagged and each column corresponds to a linguistic feature. The MFTE outputs three different tables of feature counts:

  1. counts_mixed_normed.csv Normalised feature frequencies calculated on the basis of linguistically meaningful normalisation baselines (as listed in the fifth column of the List_Features_MFTE_python_1.5.xlsx)
  2. counts_word-based_normed.csv Feature frequencies normalised to 100 words
  3. counts_raw.csv Raw (unnormalised) feature counts

Note that the MFTE only tags and computes count tallies and relative frequencies of all the features. It does not compute perform the multidimensional analysis itself. R scripts to carry out MDA analysis using EFA and PCA on the basis of the outputs of the MFTE will soon be added to this repository.

Evaluation

Le Foll, Elen & Muhammad Shakir. 2023. Evaluating the Multi-Feature Tagger of English (MFTE): Challenges and implications for corpus tool evaluations and comparisons. Poster presented at the Corpus Linguistics Conference (CL2023), Lancaster University (UK). Link.

Acknowledgements

Funding

This project has been partially funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) grant number 452561886.

Acknowledgements from the MFTE Perl

Elen would like to extend special thanks to Peter Uhrig and Michael Franke for supervising her M.Sc. thesis on the development and evaluation of the first, Perl version of the MFTE. Many thanks to Andrea Nini for releasing the MAT under an open-source licence, which served as the baseline for this previous version of the MFTE. Heartfelt thanks also go to Stefanie Evert and Luke Tudge who contributed advice and code in various ways and to Larissa Goulart for her insights into the Biber Tagger. Finally, Elen would also like to thank Dirk Siepmann for supporting this project.

Citation

The MFTE can be cited as follows:

APA

Le Foll, E., & Shakir, M. (2023). MFTE Python (Version 1.0) [Computer software]. https://github.com/mshakirDr/MFTE

Bibtex

@software{Le_Foll_MFTE_Python_2023, author = {Le Foll, Elen and Shakir, Muhammad}, month = {4}, title = {{MFTE Python}}, url = {https://github.com/mshakirDr/MFTE}, version = {1.0}, year = {2023} }

Please also cite the Python library Stanza.

APA

Qi, P., Zhang, Y., Zhang, Y., Bolton, J., & Manning, C. D. (2020). Stanza: A Python Natural Language Processing Toolkit for Many Human Languages. https://doi.org/10.48550/ARXIV.2003.07082

Bibtex

@article{qi_stanza_2020, title = {Stanza: A Python Natural Language Processing Toolkit for Many Human Languages}, doi = {10.48550/ARXIV.2003.07082}, shorttitle = {Stanza}, author = {Qi, Peng and Zhang, Yuhao and Zhang, Yuhui and Bolton, Jason and Manning, Christopher D.}, urldate = {2023-04-04}, date = {2020}, }

License

License: GPL v3

References

Biber, Douglas (1984). A model of textual relations within the written and spoken modes. University of Southern California. Unpublished PhD thesis.

Biber, Douglas (1988). Variation across speech and writing. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Biber, Douglas (1995). Dimensions of Register Variation. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.

Biber, D. (2006). University language: A corpus-based study of spoken and written registers. Benjamins.

Biber, D., Johansson, S., Leech, G., Conrad, S., & Finegan, E. (1999). Longman Grammar of Spoken and Written English. Longman Publications Group.

Conrad, Susan & Douglas Biber (eds.) (2013). Variation in English: Multi-Dimensional Studies (Studies in Language and Linguistics). New York: Routledge.

Le Foll, Elen (2021). A New Tagger for the Multi-Dimensional Analysis of Register Variation in English. Osnabrück University: Institute of Cognitive Science Unpublished M.Sc. thesis.

Nini, Andrea (2014). Multidimensional Analysis Tagger (MAT). https://sites.google.com/site/multidimensionaltagger.

Nini, Andrea (2019). The Muli-Dimensional Analysis Tagger. In Berber Sardinha, T. & Veirano Pinto M. (eds), Multi-Dimensional Analysis: Research Methods and Current Issues, 67-94, London; New York: Bloomsbury Academic.

Qi, P., Zhang, Y., Zhang, Y., Bolton, J., & Manning, C. D. (2020). Stanza: A Python Natural Language Processing Toolkit for Many Human Languages. https://doi.org/10.48550/ARXIV.2003.07082

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

MFTE-1.0.0.4.tar.gz (66.0 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

MFTE-1.0.0.4-py3-none-any.whl (61.9 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file MFTE-1.0.0.4.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: MFTE-1.0.0.4.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 66.0 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/5.0.0 CPython/3.11.5

File hashes

Hashes for MFTE-1.0.0.4.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 633c8934849a9389783e0a20848562854a4218f8df4f51ecba7414bd71641a54
MD5 1c178953afadaf80b3ce26d531760ad6
BLAKE2b-256 5af3afcdf0d8e68440a5738c0c781fce3e91b84d266e4e01fb85dfcf708cc73b

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

File details

Details for the file MFTE-1.0.0.4-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: MFTE-1.0.0.4-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 61.9 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/5.0.0 CPython/3.11.5

File hashes

Hashes for MFTE-1.0.0.4-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 23b89e689683ba5e1e6b61521508cd16413138757a6edc362e18cf4a5244f0b6
MD5 a8c62224653ee6edaff2097cd122b3c1
BLAKE2b-256 38d2f96bc90041b14149a6de3b352870f095c6c830c4a6ac70b95a42ab6c724c

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page