Utilizing External Knowledge to Enhance Semantics in Emotion Detection in Conversation

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Abstract

Enabling machines to emotion recognition in conversation is challenging, mainly because the information in human dialogue innately conveys emotions by long-term experience, abundant knowledge, context, and the intricate patterns between the affective states. We address the task of emotion recognition in conversations using external knowledge to enhance semantics. We propose KES model, a new framework that incorporates different elements of external knowledge and conversational semantic role labeling, where build upon them to learn interactions between interlocutors participating in a conversation. We design a self-attention layer specialized for enhanced semantic text features with external commonsense knowledge. Then, two different networks composed of LSTM are responsible for tracking individual internal state and context external state. In addition, the proposed model has experimented on three datasets in emotion detection in conversation. The experimental results show that our model outperforms the state-of-the-art approaches on most of the tested datasets.

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Ren, F., & She, T. (2021). Utilizing External Knowledge to Enhance Semantics in Emotion Detection in Conversation. IEEE Access, 9, 154947–154956. https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2021.3128277

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