17,305 research outputs found
Topic-dependent sentiment analysis of financial blogs
While most work in sentiment analysis in the financial domain has focused on the use of content from traditional finance news, in this work we concentrate on more subjective sources of information, blogs. We aim to automatically determine the sentiment of financial bloggers towards companies and their stocks. To do this we develop a corpus of financial blogs, annotated with polarity of sentiment with respect to a number of companies. We conduct an analysis of the annotated corpus, from which we show there is a significant level of topic shift within this collection, and also illustrate the difficulty that human annotators have when annotating certain sentiment categories. To deal with the problem of topic shift within blog articles, we propose text extraction techniques to create topic-specific sub-documents, which we use to train a sentiment classifier. We show that such approaches provide a substantial improvement over full documentclassification and that word-based approaches perform better than sentence-based or paragraph-based approaches
Adversarial Training in Affective Computing and Sentiment Analysis: Recent Advances and Perspectives
Over the past few years, adversarial training has become an extremely active
research topic and has been successfully applied to various Artificial
Intelligence (AI) domains. As a potentially crucial technique for the
development of the next generation of emotional AI systems, we herein provide a
comprehensive overview of the application of adversarial training to affective
computing and sentiment analysis. Various representative adversarial training
algorithms are explained and discussed accordingly, aimed at tackling diverse
challenges associated with emotional AI systems. Further, we highlight a range
of potential future research directions. We expect that this overview will help
facilitate the development of adversarial training for affective computing and
sentiment analysis in both the academic and industrial communities
Transfer Learning for Speech and Language Processing
Transfer learning is a vital technique that generalizes models trained for
one setting or task to other settings or tasks. For example in speech
recognition, an acoustic model trained for one language can be used to
recognize speech in another language, with little or no re-training data.
Transfer learning is closely related to multi-task learning (cross-lingual vs.
multilingual), and is traditionally studied in the name of `model adaptation'.
Recent advance in deep learning shows that transfer learning becomes much
easier and more effective with high-level abstract features learned by deep
models, and the `transfer' can be conducted not only between data distributions
and data types, but also between model structures (e.g., shallow nets and deep
nets) or even model types (e.g., Bayesian models and neural models). This
review paper summarizes some recent prominent research towards this direction,
particularly for speech and language processing. We also report some results
from our group and highlight the potential of this very interesting research
field.Comment: 13 pages, APSIPA 201
Active learning in annotating micro-blogs dealing with e-reputation
Elections unleash strong political views on Twitter, but what do people
really think about politics? Opinion and trend mining on micro blogs dealing
with politics has recently attracted researchers in several fields including
Information Retrieval and Machine Learning (ML). Since the performance of ML
and Natural Language Processing (NLP) approaches are limited by the amount and
quality of data available, one promising alternative for some tasks is the
automatic propagation of expert annotations. This paper intends to develop a
so-called active learning process for automatically annotating French language
tweets that deal with the image (i.e., representation, web reputation) of
politicians. Our main focus is on the methodology followed to build an original
annotated dataset expressing opinion from two French politicians over time. We
therefore review state of the art NLP-based ML algorithms to automatically
annotate tweets using a manual initiation step as bootstrap. This paper focuses
on key issues about active learning while building a large annotated data set
from noise. This will be introduced by human annotators, abundance of data and
the label distribution across data and entities. In turn, we show that Twitter
characteristics such as the author's name or hashtags can be considered as the
bearing point to not only improve automatic systems for Opinion Mining (OM) and
Topic Classification but also to reduce noise in human annotations. However, a
later thorough analysis shows that reducing noise might induce the loss of
crucial information.Comment: Journal of Interdisciplinary Methodologies and Issues in Science -
Vol 3 - Contextualisation digitale - 201
User Intent Prediction in Information-seeking Conversations
Conversational assistants are being progressively adopted by the general
population. However, they are not capable of handling complicated
information-seeking tasks that involve multiple turns of information exchange.
Due to the limited communication bandwidth in conversational search, it is
important for conversational assistants to accurately detect and predict user
intent in information-seeking conversations. In this paper, we investigate two
aspects of user intent prediction in an information-seeking setting. First, we
extract features based on the content, structural, and sentiment
characteristics of a given utterance, and use classic machine learning methods
to perform user intent prediction. We then conduct an in-depth feature
importance analysis to identify key features in this prediction task. We find
that structural features contribute most to the prediction performance. Given
this finding, we construct neural classifiers to incorporate context
information and achieve better performance without feature engineering. Our
findings can provide insights into the important factors and effective methods
of user intent prediction in information-seeking conversations.Comment: Accepted to CHIIR 201
Deep Memory Networks for Attitude Identification
We consider the task of identifying attitudes towards a given set of entities
from text. Conventionally, this task is decomposed into two separate subtasks:
target detection that identifies whether each entity is mentioned in the text,
either explicitly or implicitly, and polarity classification that classifies
the exact sentiment towards an identified entity (the target) into positive,
negative, or neutral.
Instead, we show that attitude identification can be solved with an
end-to-end machine learning architecture, in which the two subtasks are
interleaved by a deep memory network. In this way, signals produced in target
detection provide clues for polarity classification, and reversely, the
predicted polarity provides feedback to the identification of targets.
Moreover, the treatments for the set of targets also influence each other --
the learned representations may share the same semantics for some targets but
vary for others. The proposed deep memory network, the AttNet, outperforms
methods that do not consider the interactions between the subtasks or those
among the targets, including conventional machine learning methods and the
state-of-the-art deep learning models.Comment: Accepted to WSDM'1
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