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Prevalence of code mixing in semi-formal patient communication in low resource languages of South Africa

Abstract

In this paper we address the problem of code-mixing in resource-poor language settings. We examine data consisting of 182k unique questions generated by users of the MomConnect helpdesk, part of a national scale public health platform in South Africa. We show evidence of code-switching at the level of approximately 10% within this dataset -- a level that is likely to pose challenges for future services. We use a natural language processing library (Polyglot) that supports detection of 196 languages and attempt to evaluate its performance at identifying English, isiZulu and code-mixed questions.

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