Towards a large scale analysis of claims: developing a machine learning method for detecting and classifying politicians' claims of representation
In: Journal of computational social science, Volume 7, Issue 1, p. 917-961
ISSN: 2432-2725
9 results
Sort by:
In: Journal of computational social science, Volume 7, Issue 1, p. 917-961
ISSN: 2432-2725
In: Public administration: an international journal, Volume 102, Issue 3, p. 1026-1044
ISSN: 1467-9299
AbstractThe news media frame political debate about public agencies, and enable legislators with incomplete information to monitor and act upon agency (mal)performance. While studies show that the news media matters for parliamentary attention, the contingent nature of this relation has been understudied. Building on agenda‐setting theory, this study theorizes that the effect of newspaper coverage is contingent on the sentiment of coverage, the majority vs. opposition role of legislators, and the locus (committee vs. plenaries) of parliamentary questions. Supervised machine learning methods allow to code sentiment towards agencies in newspapers and parliament, after which a balanced panel relates these data to the questioning behavior of legislators in parliament over time. Results show that media attention for public agencies precedes parliamentary attention. Sentiment matters, as positive media attention, was related to (positive) parliamentary attention in the same month. Negative media attention had broader and more enduring influences on parliamentary questioning behavior.
The exponential growth of the amount of subjective information on the Web 2.0. has caused an increasing interest from researchers willing to develop methods to extract emotion data from these new sources. One of the most important challenges in textual emotion detection is the gathering of data with emotion labels because of the subjectivity of assigning these labels. Basing on this rationale, the main objective of our research is to contribute to the resolution of this important challenge. This is tackled by proposing EmoLabel: a semi-automatic methodology based on pre-annotation, which consists of two main phases: (1) an automatic process to pre-annotate the unlabelled English sentences; and (2) a manual process of refinement where human annotators determine which is the dominant emotion. Our objective is to assess the influence of this automatic pre-annotation method on manual emotion annotation from two points of view: agreement and time needed for annotation. The evaluation performed demonstrates the benefits of pre-annotation processes since the results on annotation time show a gain of near 20% when the pre-annotation process is applied (Pre-ML) without reducing annotator performance. Moreover, the benefits of pre-annotation are higher in those contributors whose performance is low (inaccurate annotators). ; This research has been supported by the Spanish Government (ref. RTI2018-094653-B-C22) and the Valencian Government (grant no. PROMETEU/2018/089). It has also been funded by the FPI grant (BES-2013-065950) and the research stay grant (EEBB-I-17-12578) from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation.
BASE
In: International journal of forecasting, Volume 34, Issue 2, p. 355-365
ISSN: 0169-2070
SSRN
International audience ; Multilingualism is a cultural cornerstone of Europe and firmly anchored in the European treaties including full language equality. However, language barriers impacting business, cross-lingual and cross-cultural communication are still omnipresent. Language Technologies (LTs) are a powerful means to break down these barriers. While the last decade has seen various initiatives that created a multitude of approaches and technologies tailored to Europe's specific needs, there is still an immense level of fragmentation. At the same time, AI has become an increasingly important concept in the European Information and Communication Technology area. For a few years now, AI-including many opportunities, synergies but also misconceptions-has been overshadowing every other topic. We present an overview of the European LT landscape, describing funding programmes, activities, actions and challenges in the different countries with regard to LT, including the current state of play in industry and the LT market. We present a brief overview of the main LT-related activities on the EU level in the last ten years and develop strategic guidance with regard to four key dimensions.
BASE
International audience ; Multilingualism is a cultural cornerstone of Europe and firmly anchored in the European treaties including full language equality. However, language barriers impacting business, cross-lingual and cross-cultural communication are still omnipresent. Language Technologies (LTs) are a powerful means to break down these barriers. While the last decade has seen various initiatives that created a multitude of approaches and technologies tailored to Europe's specific needs, there is still an immense level of fragmentation. At the same time, AI has become an increasingly important concept in the European Information and Communication Technology area. For a few years now, AI-including many opportunities, synergies but also misconceptions-has been overshadowing every other topic. We present an overview of the European LT landscape, describing funding programmes, activities, actions and challenges in the different countries with regard to LT, including the current state of play in industry and the LT market. We present a brief overview of the main LT-related activities on the EU level in the last ten years and develop strategic guidance with regard to four key dimensions.
BASE
This article provides an overview of the dissemination work carried out in META-NET from 2010 until 2015; we describe its impact on the regional, national and international level, mainly with regard to politics and the funding situation for LT topics. The article documents the initiative's work throughout Europe in order to boost progress and innovation in our field. ; Peer reviewed
BASE
Multilingualism is a cultural cornerstone of Europe and firmly anchored in the European treaties including full language equality. However, language barriers impacting business, cross-lingual and cross-cultural communication are still omnipresent. Language Technologies (LTs) are a powerful means to break down these barriers. While the last decade has seen various initiatives that created a multitude of approaches and technologies tailored to Europe's specific needs, there is still an immense level of fragmentation. At the same time, AI has become an increasingly important concept in the European Information and Communication Technology area. For a few years now, AI – including many opportunities, synergies but also misconceptions – has been overshadowing every other topic. We present an overview of the European LT landscape, describing funding programmes, activities, actions and challenges in the different countries with regard to LT, including the current state of play in industry and the LT market. We present a brief overview of the main LT-related activities on the EU level in the last ten years and develop strategic guidance with regard to four key dimensions.
BASE