Detection of Somali-written Fake News and Toxic Messages on the Social Media Using Transformer-based Language Models
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2503.18117v1
- Date: Sun, 23 Mar 2025 15:45:31 GMT
- Title: Detection of Somali-written Fake News and Toxic Messages on the Social Media Using Transformer-based Language Models
- Authors: Muhidin A. Mohamed, Shuab D. Ahmed, Yahye A. Isse, Hanad M. Mohamed, Fuad M. Hassan, Houssein A. Assowe,
- Abstract summary: This paper presents part of our ongoing research work to bridge some of these gaps for the Somali language.<n>We developed a transformer-based monolingual Somali language model (named SomBERTa)<n>SomBERTa is fine-tuned and evaluated on toxic content, fake news and news topic classification datasets.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Abstract: The fact that everyone with a social media account can create and share content, and the increasing public reliance on social media platforms as a news and information source bring about significant challenges such as misinformation, fake news, harmful content, etc. Although human content moderation may be useful to an extent and used by these platforms to flag posted materials, the use of AI models provides a more sustainable, scalable, and effective way to mitigate these harmful contents. However, low-resourced languages such as the Somali language face limitations in AI automation, including scarce annotated training datasets and lack of language models tailored to their unique linguistic characteristics. This paper presents part of our ongoing research work to bridge some of these gaps for the Somali language. In particular, we created two human-annotated social-media-sourced Somali datasets for two downstream applications, fake news \& toxicity classification, and developed a transformer-based monolingual Somali language model (named SomBERTa) -- the first of its kind to the best of our knowledge. SomBERTa is then fine-tuned and evaluated on toxic content, fake news and news topic classification datasets. Comparative evaluation analysis of the proposed model against related multilingual models (e.g., AfriBERTa, AfroXLMR, etc) demonstrated that SomBERTa consistently outperformed these comparators in both fake news and toxic content classification tasks while achieving the best average accuracy (87.99%) across all tasks. This research contributes to Somali NLP by offering a foundational language model and a replicable framework for other low-resource languages, promoting digital and AI inclusivity and linguistic diversity.
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