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Error code: FeaturesError Exception: ValueError Message: Not able to read records in the JSON file at hf://datasets/NYTK/HuSST@14215f45b4c630c03dbed18508b18176b691449b/data/sst_train.json. You should probably indicate the field of the JSON file containing your records. This JSON file contain the following fields: ['data']. Select the correct one and provide it as `field='XXX'` to the dataset loading method. Traceback: Traceback (most recent call last): File "/src/services/worker/src/worker/job_runners/split/first_rows.py", line 240, in compute_first_rows_from_streaming_response iterable_dataset = iterable_dataset._resolve_features() File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/iterable_dataset.py", line 2216, in _resolve_features features = _infer_features_from_batch(self.with_format(None)._head()) File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/iterable_dataset.py", line 1239, in _head return _examples_to_batch(list(self.take(n))) File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/iterable_dataset.py", line 1389, in __iter__ for key, example in ex_iterable: File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/iterable_dataset.py", line 1044, in __iter__ yield from islice(self.ex_iterable, self.n) File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/iterable_dataset.py", line 282, in __iter__ for key, pa_table in self.generate_tables_fn(**self.kwargs): File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/packaged_modules/json/json.py", line 170, in _generate_tables raise ValueError( ValueError: Not able to read records in the JSON file at hf://datasets/NYTK/HuSST@14215f45b4c630c03dbed18508b18176b691449b/data/sst_train.json. You should probably indicate the field of the JSON file containing your records. This JSON file contain the following fields: ['data']. Select the correct one and provide it as `field='XXX'` to the dataset loading method.
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Dataset Card for HuSST
Dataset Summary
This is the dataset card for the Hungarian version of the Stanford Sentiment Treebank. This dataset which is also part of the Hungarian Language Understanding Evaluation Benchmark Kit HuLU. The corpus was created by translating and re-annotating the original SST (Roemmele et al., 2011).
Supported Tasks and Leaderboards
'sentiment classification'
'sentiment scoring'
Language
The BCP-47 code for Hungarian, the only represented language in this dataset, is hu-HU.
Dataset Structure
Data Instances
For each instance, there is an id, a sentence and a sentiment label.
An example:
{
"Sent_id": "dev_0",
"Sent": "Nos, a Jason elment Manhattanbe és a Pokolba kapcsán, azt hiszem, az elkerülhetetlen folytatások ötletlistájáról kihúzhatunk egy űrállomást 2455-ben (hé, ne lődd le a poént).",
"Label": "neutral"
}
Data Fields
Sent_id: unique id of the instances;
Sent: the sentence, translation of an instance of the SST dataset;
Label: "negative", "neutral", or "positive".
Data Splits
HuSST has 3 splits: train, validation and test.
Dataset split | Number of instances in the split |
---|---|
train | 9344 |
validation | 1168 |
test | 1168 |
The test data is distributed without the labels. To evaluate your model, please contact us, or check HuLU's website for an automatic evaluation (this feature is under construction at the moment).
Dataset Creation
Source Data
Initial Data Collection and Normalization
The data is a translation of the content of the SST dataset (only the whole sentences were used). Each sentence was translated by a human translator. Each translation was manually checked and further refined by another annotator.
Annotations
Annotation process
The translated sentences were annotated by three human annotators with one of the following labels: negative, neutral and positive. Each sentence was then curated by a fourth annotator (the 'curator'). The final label is the decision of the curator based on the three labels of the annotators.
Who are the annotators?
The translators were native Hungarian speakers with English proficiency. The annotators were university students with some linguistic background.
Additional Information
Licensing Information
Citation Information
If you use this resource or any part of its documentation, please refer to:
Ligeti-Nagy, N., Ferenczi, G., Héja, E., Jelencsik-Mátyus, K., Laki, L. J., Vadász, N., Yang, Z. Gy. and Vadász, T. (2022) HuLU: magyar nyelvű benchmark adatbázis kiépítése a neurális nyelvmodellek kiértékelése céljából [HuLU: Hungarian benchmark dataset to evaluate neural language models]. XVIII. Magyar Számítógépes Nyelvészeti Konferencia. pp. 431–446.
@inproceedings{ligetinagy2022hulu,
title={HuLU: magyar nyelvű benchmark adatbázis kiépítése a neurális nyelvmodellek kiértékelése céljából},
author={Ligeti-Nagy, N. and Ferenczi, G. and Héja, E. and Jelencsik-Mátyus, K. and Laki, L. J. and Vadász, N. and Yang, Z. Gy. and Vadász, T.},
booktitle={XVIII. Magyar Számítógépes Nyelvészeti Konferencia},
year={2022},
pages = {431--446}
}
and to:
Socher et al. (2013), Recursive Deep Models for Semantic Compositionality Over a Sentiment Treebank. In: Proceedings of the 2013 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing. 1631--1642.
@inproceedings{socher-etal-2013-recursive,
title = "Recursive Deep Models for Semantic Compositionality Over a Sentiment Treebank",
author = "Socher, Richard and
Perelygin, Alex and
Wu, Jean and
Chuang, Jason and
Manning, Christopher D. and
Ng, Andrew and
Potts, Christopher",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 2013 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing",
month = oct,
year = "2013",
address = "Seattle, Washington, USA",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://www.aclweb.org/anthology/D13-1170",
pages = "1631--1642",
}
Contributions
Thanks to lnnoemi for adding this dataset.
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