Title: Josef Ruppenhofer, Swapna Somasundaran, Janyce Wiebe University of Pittsburgh
1Finding the sources and targets of subjective
expressions
- Josef Ruppenhofer, Swapna Somasundaran, Janyce
WiebeUniversity of Pittsburgh
2What is Subjectivity?
- The linguistic expression of somebodys opinions,
sentiments, emotions, evaluations, beliefs,
speculations (private states) - This pleased the mainly female audience.
- Source the person who experiences a private
state - Target what the private state is about or
directed towards
3Motivation
- Sentiment analysis is a fast-growing field with
many applications (e.g. Question Answering,
Product review mining, Information Extraction) - In many kinds of texts we find opinions
attributed to several different sources, and/or
opinions about multiple targets
4Opinion Question Answering
- Q What is the international reaction to the
reelection of Robert Mugabe as President of
Zimbabwe? - A African observers generally approved of his
victory while Western Governments strongly
denounced it. -
5Product review mining
- The computer is very good and very easy to use.
It has a built in camera, bluetooth the all
singing and dancing machine. Love it. The only
glitch is the scrolling pad is not as smooth as
my last Toshiba notebook. One other thing is that
Vista is a nightmare...
6Motivation
- Sentiment analysis is a fast-growing field with
many applications (e.g. Question Answering,
Product review mining, Information Extraction) - In many kinds of texts we find opinions
attributed to several different sources, and/or
opinions about multiple targets - Challenge is to associate sources, opinions, and
targets correctly
7Roadmap
- Here we discuss some of the challenges that an
automatic system needs to be able to deal with - We take the use of Automatic Semantic Role
Labeling (ASRL) systems as our starting point - Based on our work in corpus annotation, we show
that we need additional capabilities beyond ASRL
8Automatic Semantic Role Labeling
9Semantic roles
- This pleased the mainly female audience.
PropBank FrameNet
Arg1 Experiencer
Arg0 Stimulus
- We fear an early death much more.
PropBank FrameNet
Arg0 Experiencer
Arg1 Content
10Mapping opinion roles to semantic roles
- This pleased the mainly female audience.
Opinion roles PropBank FrameNet
Source Arg1 Experiencer
Target Arg0 Stimulus
- We fear an early death much more.
Opinion roles PropBank FrameNet
Source Arg0 Experiencer
Target Arg1 Content
11Annotation scheme
12Private states (Quirk et al. 1985)
- States such as emotions, evaluations,
speculations, etc. - States that are not open to objective observation
or verification. - States that involve a particular persons point
of view - Private states involve sources holding attitudes,
typically towards targets.
13Ways of evoking private states
- Explicit mentionsHe was boiling with anger.
- Speaking events expressing private statesThe
papers editors attacked the new House Speaker. - Expressive subjective elements (Banfield
1982)That doctor is a quack. - Objective speech eventsThe bus leaves at 4,
Bill said.
DSEs
ESEs
14Nesting of private states
- The US fears a spill-over, said Xirao-Nima.
-
15Nesting of private states
- The US fears a spill-over, said Xirao-Nima.
-
ltwritergt
said Xirao-Nima
The US fears a spill-over
16Challenges beyond role labeling
Sources Targets
Attribution
Referent Identification Referent Identification
Inferences
Arguing Attitudes
17Attribution
18Attribution
- Expressive subjective elements (ESEs) dont have
a semantic role for their sourceSenior Mike
Sheehy said , It was a blast .
19Attribution
- The source for an ESE is not always at the same
level. CompareSenior Mike Sheehy said, It was
a blast. - She loves that idiot.
20ltwritergt
Senior Mike Sheey said, It was a blast
21Attribution
- Some expressions function both as ESEs and as
DSEs
22Attribution
- Some expressions function both as ESEs and as
DSEsIt is a shame that there is no jury that
can mete out justice for a city he has slandered
for far too long.
source target
DSE He city
ESE ltwritergt he
23Attribution
- Attribution and content of a private state may
be presented separately -
24Attribution
- Attribution and content of a private state may
be presented separately - Chris Moyles is a brilliant broadcaster, the
saviour of Radio 1, a comedian, a best-selling
author, and, in fact, a genius. Or so he says.
25Attribution
ltwritergt
Chris Moyles is a brilliant broadcaster, the
saviour of Radio 1, a comedian, a best-selling
author, and, in fact, a genius.
26Attribution
ltwritergt
ltChris Moylesgt
Chris Moyles is a brilliant broadcaster, the
saviour of Radio 1, a comedian, a best-selling
author, and, in fact, a genius.
Or so he says
27Attribution
- An attribution may apply to several utterances
without being explicitly signaled each time.
And I went ahead and mailed it in
thinking uh I wont get the scholarship. Who
cares? I dont, just so I can work in the school
and Ill be happy.
But one day I came in and I looked at my mail and
I was accepted.
28Reference Identification
29Reference Identification
- Overt referentsYou think about it and then let
me know.Some people say the Steelers are
contenders but Im not convinced of it.
30Reference Identification
- Zero referentsSource Think about it and then
let me know.Target Some people say the
Steelers are contenders but Im not convinced.
31Reference Identification
- Exophora referents are present only in the
physical contextSorry.Oopsy-daisy.
32Inferences
33Inferences
- For some events about which opinions are
expressed, we can infer additional attitudes
towards affected or causing participants
34Inferences
- For some events about which opinions are
expressed, we can infer additional attitudes
towards affected or causing participantsI
think people are happy because Chavez has fallen.
35Inferences
- For some events about which opinions are
expressed, we can infer additional attitudes
towards affected or causing participantsI
think people are happy because Chavez has fallen. - I think people are happy because Chavez has
fallen.
36Inferences
- The targets occurring in a discourse are often
interrelated such that opinions about local
targets contribute to the overall assessment of a
global target. - The computer is very good and very easy to
use. It has a built in camera, bluetooth the
all singing and dancing machine. Love it. The
only glitch is the scrolling pad is not as
smooth as my last Toshiba notebook. One other
thing is that Vista is a nightmare...
37Targets of arguing
38Arguing attitudes
- What is the case or not
- From this it follows that mechanisation is not
economic unless it can produce higher yields of
crops than these older methods. - What should be done or not
- We strongly recommend that all Firefox users
upgrade to this latest release.
39Targets of arguing
- Interpretation of arguments made by causal and
conditional constructions is very
context-dependent. - Your presentation will be better if you put
this on the first slide - You will want to vote YES if you want to keep
the cost of government in Lewiston low
40Targets of arguing
- Interpretation of arguments made by causal and
conditional constructions is very
context-dependent. - Hypothetical Your presentation will be better
if you put this on the first slide - Implicit assertion You will want to vote YES if
you want to keep the cost of government in
Lewiston low
41Targets of arguing
- Easy finder with the a whistle function or
something, or rechargeable station because its
a pain when you run out of batteries. - If youre not a good cook, then taking your
girlfriend out to an expensive restaurant might
be the next best romantic date idea. ... Youll
feel good because youve made her happy with a
romantic date.
42Targets of arguing
- The prototypical targets that we annotate are
entities. - For arguing, we could also annotate the entities
that arguments are about. - However, we also recognize that the logical
targets of arguing are propositions.
43Targets of arguing
- Clinton should be the presidential candidate.
- Clinton should be the running mate.
- The prototypical targets that we annotate are
entities. - For arguing, we could also annotate the entities
that arguments are about. - However, we also recognize that the logical
targets of arguing are propositions.
44Targets of arguing
- Clinton should be the presidential candidate.
- Clinton should be the running mate.
- The prototypical targets that we annotate are
entities. - For arguing, we could also annotate the entities
that arguments are about. - However, we also recognize that the logical
targets of arguing are propositions.
45Targets of arguing
- Clinton should be the presidential candidate.
- Clinton should be the running mate.
- The prototypical targets that we annotate are
entities. - For arguing, we could also annotate the entities
that arguments are about. - However, we also recognize that the logical
targets of arguing are propositions.
46Targets of arguing
- Clinton should be the presidential candidate.
- Clinton should be the running mate.
- The prototypical targets that we annotate are
entities. - For arguing, we could also annotate the entities
that arguments are about. - However, we also recognize that the logical
targets of arguing are propositions.
47Conclusion
- Semantic role labeling is needed for finding
sources and targets - But we also need
- ways of establishing levels of attribution
- capabilities for dealing with zero references
- lexical information to support inferences
- deal with the full variety of attitudes and their
sources and targets
48Thanks!josefr_at_cs.pitt.edu
49References Annotation scheme
- Banfield, Ann. 1982. Unspeakable Sentences
Narration and Representation in the Language of
Fiction. Routledge Kegan Paul, Boston. - Quirk Randolph, Greenbaum Sidney, Leech Geoffrey,
and Svartvik Jan. 1985. A Comprehensive Grammar
of the English Language. Longman, New York, NY. - Janyce Wiebe M. 1994. Tracking point of view in
narrative. Computational Linguistics 20 (2)
233-287.
50References Annotation scheme
- Janyce Wiebe, Theresa Wilson , and Claire
Cardie. 2005. Annotating expressions of opinions
and emotions in language. Language Resources and
Evaluation, volume 39, issue 2-3, pp. 165-210.
51References Role Labeling
- Penn Discourse Treebank http//www.seas.upenn.edu/
pdtb/PDTBAPI/pdtb-annotation-manual.pdf - PropBankhttp//verbs.colorado.edu/mpalmer/projec
ts/ace.html - FrameNethttp//framenet.icsi.berkeley.edu/
52References Role Labeling
- Y. Choi, E. Breck, and C. Cardie. 2006. Joint
Extraction of Entities and Relations for Opinion
Recognition. In Proc. of EMNLP 2006. - S. Kim and E. Hovy. 2006. Extracting Opinions,
Opinion Holders, and Topics Expressed in Online
News Media Text. In ACL Workshop on Sentiment and
Subjectivity in Text.
53References Belief spaces
- Dyer, Michael G. 1983. In-Depth Understanding A
Computer Model of Integrated Processing for
Narrative Comprehension. MIT Press, Cambridge,
MA. - Fauconnier, Gilles. 1985. Mental Spaces Aspects
of Meaning Construction in Natural Language. MIT
Press, Cambridge, MA.
54References Belief spaces
- Rapaport, William J. 1986. Logical Foundations
for Belief Representation. Cognitive Science. - Wilks, Yorick and Bien, Janusz. Beliefs, Points
of View, and Multiple Environments. Cognitive
Science 7 95-119.
55References Literary theory
- Chatman, Seymour. 1978. Story and Discourse
Narrative Structure in Fiction and Film. Cornell
University Press, Ithaca, NY. - Cohn, Dorrit. 1978. Transparent Minds Narrative
Modes for Representing Consciousness in Fiction
Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ. - Dolezel, Lubomir. 1973 .Narrative Modes in Czech
Literature. University of Toronto Press, Toronto,
Canada.
56References Literary theory
- Hamburger Käte. 1973. M.J. Rose, Trans., The
Logic of Literature. Indiana University Press,
Bloomington, Indiana. - Kuroda, S.-Y. 1976. Reflections on the
Foundations of Narrative Theory--From a
Linguistic Point of View. In van Dijk, T.A.,
Ed., Pragmatics of Language and Literature, North
Holland, Amsterdam. - Uspensky, Boris. 1973. A Poetics of Composition.
University of California Press, Berkeley, CA.
57References Discourse
- Allen, James F. and Perrault, C. Raymond. 1980.
Analyzing Intention in Utterances. Artificial
Intelligence 15 143-178. - Fillmore, Charles. 1974. Pragmatics and the
Description of Discourse. In Fillmore, Charles,
Lakoff, George, and Lakoff, Robin, Eds., Berkeley
Studies in Syntax and Semantics I. University of
California Dept. of Linguistics and Institute of
Human Learning, Berkeley, CA V1-V21.
58Extra slides
59Nesting of private states
- The US fears a spill-over, said Xirao-Nima.
Level Private state span source
0 ltgt ltwritergt
1 said Xirao-Nima
2 fears the US
60Nesting of private states
- The US fears a spill-over, said Xirao-Nima.
Level Private state span source
0 ltgt ltwritergt
1 said Xirao-Nima
2 fears the US
61Nesting of private states
- The US fears a spill-over, said Xirao-Nima.
Level Private state span source
0 ltgt ltwritergt
1 said Xirao-Nima
2 fears the US