982 research outputs found

    Sentiment classification with case-base approach

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    L'augmentation de la croissance des rĂ©seaux, des blogs et des utilisateurs des sites d'examen sociaux font d'Internet une Ă©norme source de donnĂ©es, en particulier sur la façon dont les gens pensent, sentent et agissent envers diffĂ©rentes questions. Ces jours-ci, les opinions des gens jouent un rĂŽle important dans la politique, l'industrie, l'Ă©ducation, etc. Alors, les gouvernements, les grandes et petites industries, les instituts universitaires, les entreprises et les individus cherchent Ă  Ă©tudier des techniques automatiques fin d’extraire les informations dont ils ont besoin dans les larges volumes de donnĂ©es. L’analyse des sentiments est une vĂ©ritable rĂ©ponse Ă  ce besoin. Elle est une application de traitement du langage naturel et linguistique informatique qui se compose de techniques de pointe telles que l'apprentissage machine et les modĂšles de langue pour capturer les Ă©valuations positives, nĂ©gatives ou neutre, avec ou sans leur force, dans des texte brut. Dans ce mĂ©moire, nous Ă©tudions une approche basĂ©e sur les cas pour l'analyse des sentiments au niveau des documents. Notre approche basĂ©e sur les cas gĂ©nĂšre un classificateur binaire qui utilise un ensemble de documents classifies, et cinq lexiques de sentiments diffĂ©rents pour extraire la polaritĂ© sur les scores correspondants aux commentaires. Puisque l'analyse des sentiments est en soi une tĂąche dĂ©pendante du domaine qui rend le travail difficile et coĂ»teux, nous appliquons une approche «cross domain» en basant notre classificateur sur les six diffĂ©rents domaines au lieu de le limiter Ă  un seul domaine. Pour amĂ©liorer la prĂ©cision de la classification, nous ajoutons la dĂ©tection de la nĂ©gation comme une partie de notre algorithme. En outre, pour amĂ©liorer la performance de notre approche, quelques modifications innovantes sont appliquĂ©es. Il est intĂ©ressant de mentionner que notre approche ouvre la voie Ă  nouveaux dĂ©veloppements en ajoutant plus de lexiques de sentiment et ensembles de donnĂ©es Ă  l'avenir.Increasing growth of the social networks, blogs, and user review sites make Internet a huge source of data especially about how people think, feel, and act toward different issues. These days, people opinions play an important role in the politic, industry, education, etc. Thus governments, large and small industries, academic institutes, companies, and individuals are looking for investigating automatic techniques to extract their desire information from large amount of data. Sentiment analysis is one true answer to this need. Sentiment analysis is an application of natural language processing and computational linguistic that consists of advanced techniques such as machine learning and language model approaches to capture the evaluative factors such as positive, negative, or neutral, with or without their strength, from plain texts. In this thesis we study a case-based approach on cross-domain for sentiment analysis on the document level. Our case-based algorithm generates a binary classifier that uses a set of the processed cases, and five different sentiment lexicons to extract the polarity along the corresponding scores from the reviews. Since sentiment analysis inherently is a domain dependent task that makes it problematic and expensive work, we use a cross-domain approach by training our classifier on the six different domains instead of limiting it to one domain. To improve the accuracy of the classifier, we add negation detection as a part of our algorithm. Moreover, to improve the performance of our approach, some innovative modifications are applied. It is worth to mention that our approach allows for further developments by adding more sentiment lexicons and data sets in the future

    Negation Processing: a Dynamic Pragmatic Account

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    This thesis investigates the processing of negative assertions. Psycholinguistic research shows that out-of-context negative sentences are more difficult to process than positive sentences. In the early stages of negation processing, the positive counterpart is often represented. Pragmatic research shows that negative sentences have richer pragmatic functions than positive sentences. These findings require a theory of negative sentence processing that can account for both the processing effects and pragmatic functions. Among current theories, a popular approach – rejection approach – attributes the processing effects to the processing of the linguistically coded meaning of negative sentences. They propose that negative sentences are represented as the rejection of their positive counterparts. They state that the representation of the positive counterpart is a mandatory first step of negation processing, and explain the processing cost in terms of the extra step of embedding. Arguing against current theories (especially rejection accounts), I propose the dynamic pragmatic account. In general, sentence processing – with or without explicit context- should not only involve processing the linguistically coded content, but also involve inferring pragmatically retrieved content such as how the sentence relates to the broader discourse. Specifically, when we interpret an assertion, we not only process the asserted meaning, but also the Question Under Discussion (QUD) addressed by this assertion, which can be retrieved and accommodated using linguistic and non-linguistic cues. Negation is a cue for retrieving the prominent QUD. Without contextual support or further cues, the most prominent QUD for a negative sentence ¬p is the positive question whether p. The projection of this positive QUD is due to the most frequent uses of negation, and is sensitive to other factors (e.g. frequency of the predicate and context) and other QUD cues (e.g. prosodic focus and cleft construction). I propose that the accommodation of a positive QUD contributes to the processing cost of negation, explains why the positive counterparts are often represented, and accounts for the pragmatic effects of negative sentences. The dynamic pragmatic account and competing theories are tested in three series of experiments in Chapters 3-5. In Chapter 3, I show that the representation of the positive counterpart is not a mandatory first step for negation processing. Rather it is likely due to QUD accommodation. When a negative sentence projects a negative prominent QUD (such as a cleft negative sentence “It is John who hasn’t ironed his shirt”), the positive counterpart is no longer represented. In Chapter 4, I investigate the verification of negative sentences against pictures. Previous studies have reported inconsistent results where verifying true negative sentences can take less, equal amount or more time than verifying false negatives. I argue that two strategies can be used in the task: the default strategy and the truth-functional strategy. The default strategy is to infer and represent the situation that makes the sentence true and compare it with the evidence. In addition, the accommodation of the positive QUD may encourage the development of a truth-functional strategy, in which participants answer the positive QUD and then switch the truth index. I show that when negative sentences project positive QUDs, there is a training effect: the reaction time pattern of true and false negatives change over time, indicating a development of a task-specific strategy; on the other hand, when negative sentences project negative QUDs, participants no longer develop the task-specific strategy. In Chapter 5, I investigate the time course of negative sentence processing in a visual world eye-tracking study. The results show that processing simple negative sentences is delayed compared to processing simple positives, but processing cleft negatives is no more delayed than processing cleft positives. Importantly, both QUD accommodation and the integration of the meaning of negation can happen incrementally. Overall, the findings speak against current models of negation processing (especially rejection accounts), and support the dynamic pragmatic account

    Qualities, objects, sorts, and other treasures : gold digging in English and Arabic

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    In the present monograph, we will deal with questions of lexical typology in the nominal domain. By the term "lexical typology in the nominal domain", we refer to crosslinguistic regularities in the interaction between (a) those areas of the lexicon whose elements are capable of being used in the construction of "referring phrases" or "terms" and (b) the grammatical patterns in which these elements are involved. In the traditional analyses of a language such as English, such phrases are called "nominal phrases". In the study of the lexical aspects of the relevant domain, however, we will not confine ourselves to the investigation of "nouns" and "pronouns" but intend to take into consideration all those parts of speech which systematically alternate with nouns, either as heads or as modifiers of nominal phrases. In particular, this holds true for adjectives both in English and in other Standard European Languages. It is well known that adjectives are often difficult to distinguish from nouns, or that elements with an overt adjectival marker are used interchangeably with nouns, especially in particular semantic fields such as those denoting MATERIALS or NATlONALlTIES. That is, throughout this work the expression "lexical typology in the nominal domain" should not be interpreted as "a typology of nouns", but, rather, as the cross-linguistic investigation of lexical areas constitutive for "referring phrases" irrespective of how the parts-of-speech system in a specific language is defined

    Knowledge elicitation, semantics and inference

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    Detecting negation scope is easy, except when it isn't

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    Detection, Modelling and Visualisation of Georeferenced Emotions from User-Generated Content

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    In recent years emotion-related applications like smartphone apps that document and analyse the emotions of the user, have become very popular. But research also can deal with human emotions in a very technology-driven approach. Thus space-related emotions are of interest as well which can be visualised cartographically and can be captured in different ways. The research project of this dissertation deals with the extraction of georeferenced emotions from the written language in the metadata of Flickr and Panoramio photos, thus from user-generated content, as well as with their modelling and visualisation. Motivation is the integration of an emotional component into location-based services for tourism since only factual information is considered thus far although places have an emotional impact. The metadata of those user-generated photos contain descriptions of the place that is depicted within the respective picture. The words used have affective connotations which are determined with the help of emotional word lists. The emotion that is associated with the particular word in the word list is described on the basis of the two dimensions ‘valence’ and ‘arousal’. Together with the coordinates of the respective photo, the extracted emotion forms a georeferenced emotion. The algorithm that was developed for the extraction of these emotions applies different approaches from the field of computer linguistics and considers grammatical special cases like the amplification or negation of words. The algorithm was applied to a dataset of Flickr and Panoramio photos of Dresden (Germany). The results are an emotional characterisation of space which makes it possible to assess and investigate specific features of georeferenced emotions. These features are especially related to the temporal dependence and the temporal reference of emotions on one hand; on the other hand collectively and individually perceived emotions have to be distinguished. As a consequence, a place does not necessarily have to be connected with merely one emotion but possibly also with several. The analysis was carried out with the help of different cartographic visualisations. The temporal occurrence of georeferenced emotions was examined detailed. Hence the dissertation focuses on fundamental research into the extraction of space-related emotions from georeferenced user-generated content as well as their visualisation. However as an outlook, further research questions and core themes are identified which arose during the investigations. This shows that this subject is far from being exhausted.:Statement of Authorship I Acknowledgements II Abstract III Zusammenfassung V Table of Contents VII List of Figures XI List of Tables XIV List of Abbreviations XV 1 Introduction 1 1.1 Motivation 1 1.2 Research Questions 3 1.3 Thesis Structure 4 1.4 Underlying Publications 4 2 State of the Art 6 2.1 Emotions 6 2.1.1 Definitions and Terms 6 2.1.2 Emotion Theories 7 2.1.2.1 James-Lange Theory 9 2.1.2.2 Two-Factor Theory 9 2.1.3 Structuring Emotions 9 2.1.3.1 Dimensional Approaches 10 2.1.3.2 Basic Emotions 11 2.1.3.3 Empirical Similarity Categories 12 2.1.4 Acquisition of Emotions 14 2.1.4.1 Verbal Procedures 14 2.1.4.2 Non-Verbal Procedures 14 2.1.5 Relation between Emotions and Places 15 2.1.6 Emotions in Language 17 2.1.7 Affect Analysis and Sentiment Analysis 20 2.2 User-Generated Content 22 2.2.1 Definition and Characterisation 22 2.2.2 Advantages and Disadvantages 23 2.2.3 Tagging 24 2.2.4 Inaccuracies 28 2.2.5 Flickr and Panoramio 29 2.2.5.1 Flickr 30 2.2.5.2 Panoramio 31 2.3 Related Work on Georeferenced Emotions 32 2.3.1 Emotional Data Resulting from Biometric Measurements 33 2.3.1.1 Bio Mapping 33 2.3.1.2 EmBaGIS 34 2.3.1.3 Ein emotionales Kiezportrait 35 2.3.2 Emotional Data Resulting from Empirical Surveys 35 2.3.2.1 EmoMap 35 2.3.2.2 WiMo 36 2.3.2.3 ECDESUP 37 2.3.2.4 Map of World Happiness 38 2.3.2.5 Emotional Study of Yeongsan River Basin 39 2.3.3 Emotional Data Resulting from User-Generated Content 40 2.3.3.1 Emography 40 2.3.3.2 Twittermood 40 2.3.3.3 Tweetbeat 42 2.3.3.4 Beautiful picture of an ugly place 42 2.3.4 Visualisation in the Related Work 43 3 Methods 45 3.1 Approach for Extracting Georeferenced Emotions from the Metadata of Flickr and Panoramio Photos 45 3.2 Implemented Algorithm 45 3.3 Grammatical Special Cases 47 3.3.1 Degree Words 48 3.3.2 Negation 52 3.3.2.1 Syntactic Negation in English Language 55 3.3.2.2 Syntactic Negation in German Language 57 3.3.3 Modification of Words Affected by Grammatical Special Cases 60 4 Visualisation and Analysis of Extracted Georeferenced Emotions 62 4.1 Data Basis 62 4.2 Density Maps 67 4.3 Inverse Distance Weight 71 4.4 3D Visualisation 73 4.5 Choropleth Mapping 74 4.6 Point Symbols 78 4.7 Impact of Considering Grammatical Special Cases 80 5 Investigation in Temporal Aspects 85 5.1 Annually Occurrence of Emotions 85 5.2 Periodic Events 87 5.3 Single Events 91 5.4 Dependence of Georeferenced Emotions on Different Periods of Time 93 5.4.1 Seasons 95 5.4.2 Months 96 5.4.3 Weekdays 98 5.4.4 Times of Day 99 5.5 Potentials and Limits of Temporal Analyses 99 6 Discussion 100 6.1 Evaluation 100 6.2 Weaknesses and Problems 102 7 Conclusions and Outlook 105 7.1 Answers to the Research Questions 105 7.2 Outlook and Future Work 107 8 Bibliography 112 Appendices XVIIn den letzten Jahren sind emotionsbezogene Anwendungen, wie Apps, die die Emotionen des Nutzers dokumentieren und analysieren, sehr populĂ€r geworden. Ebenfalls in der Forschung sind Emotionen in einem sehr technologiegetriebenen Ansatz ein Thema. So auch ortsbezogene Emotionen, die sich somit kartographisch darstellen lassen und auf verschiedene Art und Weisen gewonnen werden können. Das Forschungsvorhaben der Dissertation befasst sich mit der Extraktion von georeferenzierten Emotionen aus geschriebener Sprache unter Verwendung von Metadaten verorteter Flickr- und Panoramio-Fotos, d.h. aus nutzergenerierten Inhalten, sowie deren Modellierung und Visualisierung. Motivation hierfĂŒr ist die Einbindung einer emotionalen Komponente in ortsbasierte touristische Dienste, da diese bisher nur faktische Informationen berĂŒcksichtigen, obwohl Orte durchaus eine emotionale Wirkung haben. Die Metadaten dieser nutzergenerierten Inhalte stellen Beschreibungen des auf dem Foto festgehaltenen Ortes dar. Die dafĂŒr verwendeten Wörter besitzen affektive Konnotationen, welche mit Hilfe emotionaler Wortlisten ermittelt werden. Die Emotion, die mit dem jeweiligen Wort in der Wortliste assoziiert wird, wird anhand der zwei Dimensionen Valenz und Erregung beschrieben. Die extrahierten Emotionen bilden zusammen mit der geographischen Koordinate des jeweiligen Fotos eine georeferenzierte Emotion. Der zur Extraktion dieser Emotionen entwickelte Algorithmus bringt verschiedene AnsĂ€tze aus dem Bereich der Computerlinguistik zum Einsatz und berĂŒcksichtigt ebenso grammatikalische SonderfĂ€lle, wie Intensivierung oder Negation von Wörtern. Der Algorithmus wurde auf einen Datensatz von Flickr- und Panoramio-Fotos von Dresden angewendet. Die Ergebnisse stellen eine emotionale Raumcharakterisierung dar und ermöglichen es, spezifische Eigenschaften verorteter Emotionen festzustellen und zu untersuchen. Diese Eigenschaften beziehen sich sowohl auf die zeitliche AbhĂ€ngigkeit und den zeitlichen Bezug von Emotionen, als auch darauf, dass zwischen kollektiv und individuell wahrgenommenen Emotionen unterschieden werden muss. Das bedeutet, dass ein Ort nicht nur mit einer Emotion verbunden sein muss, sondern möglicherweise auch mit mehreren. Die Auswertung erfolgte mithilfe verschiedener kartographischer Visualisierungen. Eingehender wurde das zeitliche Auftreten der ortsbezogenen Emotionen untersucht. Der Fokus der Dissertation liegt somit auf der Grundlagenforschung zur Extraktion verorteter Emotionen aus georeferenzierten nutzergenerierten Inhalten sowie deren Visualisierung. Im Ausblick werden jedoch weitere Fragestellungen und Schwerpunkte genannt, die sich im Laufe der Untersuchungen ergeben haben, womit gezeigt wird, dass dieses Forschungsgebiet bei Weitem noch nicht ausgeschöpft ist.:Statement of Authorship I Acknowledgements II Abstract III Zusammenfassung V Table of Contents VII List of Figures XI List of Tables XIV List of Abbreviations XV 1 Introduction 1 1.1 Motivation 1 1.2 Research Questions 3 1.3 Thesis Structure 4 1.4 Underlying Publications 4 2 State of the Art 6 2.1 Emotions 6 2.1.1 Definitions and Terms 6 2.1.2 Emotion Theories 7 2.1.2.1 James-Lange Theory 9 2.1.2.2 Two-Factor Theory 9 2.1.3 Structuring Emotions 9 2.1.3.1 Dimensional Approaches 10 2.1.3.2 Basic Emotions 11 2.1.3.3 Empirical Similarity Categories 12 2.1.4 Acquisition of Emotions 14 2.1.4.1 Verbal Procedures 14 2.1.4.2 Non-Verbal Procedures 14 2.1.5 Relation between Emotions and Places 15 2.1.6 Emotions in Language 17 2.1.7 Affect Analysis and Sentiment Analysis 20 2.2 User-Generated Content 22 2.2.1 Definition and Characterisation 22 2.2.2 Advantages and Disadvantages 23 2.2.3 Tagging 24 2.2.4 Inaccuracies 28 2.2.5 Flickr and Panoramio 29 2.2.5.1 Flickr 30 2.2.5.2 Panoramio 31 2.3 Related Work on Georeferenced Emotions 32 2.3.1 Emotional Data Resulting from Biometric Measurements 33 2.3.1.1 Bio Mapping 33 2.3.1.2 EmBaGIS 34 2.3.1.3 Ein emotionales Kiezportrait 35 2.3.2 Emotional Data Resulting from Empirical Surveys 35 2.3.2.1 EmoMap 35 2.3.2.2 WiMo 36 2.3.2.3 ECDESUP 37 2.3.2.4 Map of World Happiness 38 2.3.2.5 Emotional Study of Yeongsan River Basin 39 2.3.3 Emotional Data Resulting from User-Generated Content 40 2.3.3.1 Emography 40 2.3.3.2 Twittermood 40 2.3.3.3 Tweetbeat 42 2.3.3.4 Beautiful picture of an ugly place 42 2.3.4 Visualisation in the Related Work 43 3 Methods 45 3.1 Approach for Extracting Georeferenced Emotions from the Metadata of Flickr and Panoramio Photos 45 3.2 Implemented Algorithm 45 3.3 Grammatical Special Cases 47 3.3.1 Degree Words 48 3.3.2 Negation 52 3.3.2.1 Syntactic Negation in English Language 55 3.3.2.2 Syntactic Negation in German Language 57 3.3.3 Modification of Words Affected by Grammatical Special Cases 60 4 Visualisation and Analysis of Extracted Georeferenced Emotions 62 4.1 Data Basis 62 4.2 Density Maps 67 4.3 Inverse Distance Weight 71 4.4 3D Visualisation 73 4.5 Choropleth Mapping 74 4.6 Point Symbols 78 4.7 Impact of Considering Grammatical Special Cases 80 5 Investigation in Temporal Aspects 85 5.1 Annually Occurrence of Emotions 85 5.2 Periodic Events 87 5.3 Single Events 91 5.4 Dependence of Georeferenced Emotions on Different Periods of Time 93 5.4.1 Seasons 95 5.4.2 Months 96 5.4.3 Weekdays 98 5.4.4 Times of Day 99 5.5 Potentials and Limits of Temporal Analyses 99 6 Discussion 100 6.1 Evaluation 100 6.2 Weaknesses and Problems 102 7 Conclusions and Outlook 105 7.1 Answers to the Research Questions 105 7.2 Outlook and Future Work 107 8 Bibliography 112 Appendices XV

    Cognitive Grammar in Contemporary Fiction

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    This book proposes an extension of Cognitive Grammar (Langacker 1987, 1991, 2008) towards a cognitive discourse grammar, through the unique environment that literary stylistic application offers. Drawing upon contemporary research in cognitive stylistics (Text World Theory, deixis and mind-modelling, amongst others), the volume scales up central Cognitive Grammar concepts (such as construal, grounding, the reference point model and action chains) in order to explore the attenuation of experience – and how it is simulated – in literary reading. In particular, it considers a range of contemporary texts by Neil Gaiman, Jennifer Egan, Jonathan Safran Foer, Ian McEwan and Paul Auster. This application builds upon previous work that adopts Cognitive Grammar for literary analysis and provides the first extended account of Cognitive Grammar in contemporary fiction

    The metaphorical problem : realism and anti-realism in the philosophy of metaphor

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    This thesis is concerned with the meaning of metaphors. In particular, it examines a contemporary dispute in the philosophy of language, primarily comprising critical responses to Donald Davidson’s seminal work in the area, which focuses on the question of whether metaphorical utterances, qua metaphors, ought to receive distinctive semantic evaluations. I treat this debate as an instance of a more general form of philosophical dispute, which has been explored in some detail in recent work on the nature of realism and anti-realism. The thesis has five chapters. In the first chapter, I outline, motivate and evaluate two contrasting approaches to realism, proposed by Michael Devitt and Crispin Wright. I argue that neither is wholly satisfactory, but that a modified version of Wright’s approach is likely to be most fruitful in the philosophy of metaphor. In the second chapter, I examine the character of Davidson’s anti-realism, concluding that he is best thought of as an error-theorist about metaphorical meaning. I go on to set out a unified Davidsonian argument for semantic and pragmatic anti-realism about metaphor, and offer a sustained discussion and partial defence of the six premises that such an argument proceeds from. My third chapter outlines a series of common objectives to Davidson’s views, and argues that error-theorists have the resources to address many of these criticisms in a fairly plausible manner. In the fourth chapter, I go on to investigate the realist standing of metaphorical meaning in more detail. I examine the open-endedness of metaphor in the light of Wright’s response-dependent theory of intention, and argue that this approach offers a novel response to certain anti-realist concerns. The fifth chapter concerns the relationship between metaphor and non-conceptual content. I argue that thinking of metaphorical meanings as non-conceptual entails that the non-propositional and limitless character of metaphor does not pose a fatal objection to a pragmatic realist account, contra Davidson. I apply my suggested account to two test cases: metaphors that describe one’s emotional state, and religious metaphors, and argue that in each case, thinking of the metaphors as expressing non-conceptual contents is potentially suggestive and helpful. In that chapter, I also examine the possibility of an robustly realist approach to metaphorical meanings, modelled on the epistemicist approach to vagueness set out in recent work by Timothy Williamson. I demonstrate how the dominant objection to this account can be partially defused, and go on to examine the final standing of the dispute between realist and anti-realist
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