2,390 research outputs found
Satirical News Detection and Analysis using Attention Mechanism and Linguistic Features
Satirical news is considered to be entertainment, but it is potentially
deceptive and harmful. Despite the embedded genre in the article, not everyone
can recognize the satirical cues and therefore believe the news as true news.
We observe that satirical cues are often reflected in certain paragraphs rather
than the whole document. Existing works only consider document-level features
to detect the satire, which could be limited. We consider paragraph-level
linguistic features to unveil the satire by incorporating neural network and
attention mechanism. We investigate the difference between paragraph-level
features and document-level features, and analyze them on a large satirical
news dataset. The evaluation shows that the proposed model detects satirical
news effectively and reveals what features are important at which level.Comment: EMNLP 2017, 11 page
Detecting Misinformation with LLM-Predicted Credibility Signals and Weak Supervision
Credibility signals represent a wide range of heuristics that are typically
used by journalists and fact-checkers to assess the veracity of online content.
Automating the task of credibility signal extraction, however, is very
challenging as it requires high-accuracy signal-specific extractors to be
trained, while there are currently no sufficiently large datasets annotated
with all credibility signals. This paper investigates whether large language
models (LLMs) can be prompted effectively with a set of 18 credibility signals
to produce weak labels for each signal. We then aggregate these potentially
noisy labels using weak supervision in order to predict content veracity. We
demonstrate that our approach, which combines zero-shot LLM credibility signal
labeling and weak supervision, outperforms state-of-the-art classifiers on two
misinformation datasets without using any ground-truth labels for training. We
also analyse the contribution of the individual credibility signals towards
predicting content veracity, which provides new valuable insights into their
role in misinformation detection
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