Exploring Discourse Structures for Argument Impact Classification

06/02/2021
by   Xin Liu, et al.
0

Discourse relations among arguments reveal logical structures of a debate conversation. However, no prior work has explicitly studied how the sequence of discourse relations influence a claim's impact. This paper empirically shows that the discourse relations between two arguments along the context path are essential factors for identifying the persuasive power of an argument. We further propose DisCOC to inject and fuse the sentence-level structural discourse information with contextualized features derived from large-scale language models. Experimental results and extensive analysis show that the attention and gate mechanisms that explicitly model contexts and texts can indeed help the argument impact classification task defined by Durmus et al. (2019), and discourse structures among the context path of the claim to be classified can further boost the performance.

READ FULL TEXT
research
04/06/2020

The Role of Pragmatic and Discourse Context in Determining Argument Impact

Research in the social sciences and psychology has shown that the persua...
research
06/07/2023

Cross-Genre Argument Mining: Can Language Models Automatically Fill in Missing Discourse Markers?

Available corpora for Argument Mining differ along several axes, and one...
research
03/17/2018

Argumentation theory for mathematical argument

To adequately model mathematical arguments the analyst must be able to r...
research
04/30/2020

AMPERSAND: Argument Mining for PERSuAsive oNline Discussions

Argumentation is a type of discourse where speakers try to persuade thei...
research
06/08/2018

ChangeMyView Through Concessions: Do Concessions Increase Persuasion?

In discourse studies concessions are considered among those argumentativ...
research
06/15/2019

A Computational-Hermeneutic Approach for Conceptual Explicitation

We present a computer-supported approach for the logical analysis and co...
research
02/20/2021

Contextual Argument Component Classification for Class Discussions

Argument mining systems often consider contextual information, i.e. info...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset