Modeling human motives and emotions from personal narratives using external knowledge and entity tracking

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Abstract

The ability to automatically understand and infer characters' motivations and emotional states is key to better narrative comprehension. In this work, we propose a Transformer-based architecture, referred to as , to model characters' motives and emotions from personal narratives. Towards this goal, we incorporate social commonsense knowledge about the mental states of people related to social events and employ dynamic state tracking of entities using an augmented memory module. Our model learns to produce contextual embeddings and explanations of characters' mental states by integrating external knowledge along with prior narrative context and mental state encodings. We leverage weakly-annotated personal narratives and knowledge data to train our model and demonstrate its effectiveness on publicly available dataset containing annotations for character mental states. Further, we show that the learned mental state embeddings can be applied in downstream tasks such as empathetic response generation.

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Vijayaraghavan, P., & Roy, D. (2021). Modeling human motives and emotions from personal narratives using external knowledge and entity tracking. In The Web Conference 2021 - Proceedings of the World Wide Web Conference, WWW 2021 (pp. 529–540). Association for Computing Machinery, Inc. https://doi.org/10.1145/3442381.3449997

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