Attitude detection for one-round conversation: Jointly extracting target-polarity pairs

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Abstract

We tackle Attitude Detection, which we define as the task of extracting the replier’s attitude, i.e., a target-polarity pair, from a given one-round conversation. While previous studies considered Target Extraction and Polarity Classification separately,we regard them as subtasks of Attitude Detection. Our experimental results show that treating the two subtasks independently is not the optimal solution for Attitude Detection, as achieving high performance in each subtask is not sufficient for obtaining correct target-polarity pairs. Our jointly trained model AD-NET substantially outperforms the separately trained models by alleviating the target-polarity mismatch problem. By employing pointer networks to consider the target extraction task a boundary prediction problem instead of a sequence labelling problem, the model obtained better performance and faster training/inference than LSTM and LSTM-CRF based models. Moreover, we proposed a method utilising the attitude detection model to improve retrieval-based chatbots by re-ranking the response candidates with attitude features. Human evaluation indicates that with attitude detection integrated, the new responses to the sampled queries are statistically significantly more consistent, coherent, engaging and informative than the original ones obtained from a commercial chatbot.

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APA

Zeng, Z., Song, R., Lin, P., & Sakai, T. (2019). Attitude detection for one-round conversation: Jointly extracting target-polarity pairs. Journal of Information Processing, 27, 742–751. https://doi.org/10.2197/IPSJJIP.27.742

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