Capturing Reliable Fine-Grained Sentiment Associations by Crowdsourcing and Best-Worst Scaling

12/05/2017
by   Svetlana Kiritchenko, et al.
0

Access to word-sentiment associations is useful for many applications, including sentiment analysis, stance detection, and linguistic analysis. However, manually assigning fine-grained sentiment association scores to words has many challenges with respect to keeping annotations consistent. We apply the annotation technique of Best-Worst Scaling to obtain real-valued sentiment association scores for words and phrases in three different domains: general English, English Twitter, and Arabic Twitter. We show that on all three domains the ranking of words by sentiment remains remarkably consistent even when the annotation process is repeated with a different set of annotators. We also, for the first time, determine the minimum difference in sentiment association that is perceptible to native speakers of a language.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
05/11/2018

Sentiment Composition of Words with Opposing Polarities

In this paper, we explore sentiment composition in phrases that have at ...
research
04/28/2017

Word Affect Intensities

Words often convey affect -- emotions, feelings, and attitudes. Lexicons...
research
12/05/2017

The Effect of Negators, Modals, and Degree Adverbs on Sentiment Composition

Negators, modals, and degree adverbs can significantly affect the sentim...
research
07/12/2017

Multitask Learning for Fine-Grained Twitter Sentiment Analysis

Traditional sentiment analysis approaches tackle problems like ternary (...
research
11/28/2019

A Fine-grained Sentiment Dataset for Norwegian

We here introduce NoReCfine, a dataset for fine-grained sentiment analys...
research
08/27/2020

Analysis of English free association network reveals mechanisms of efficient solution of the Remote Association Tests

In this paper we study the connection between the structure and properti...
research
12/05/2017

Best-Worst Scaling More Reliable than Rating Scales: A Case Study on Sentiment Intensity Annotation

Rating scales are a widely used method for data annotation; however, the...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset