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ACL
2015

Joint Models of Disagreement and Stance in Online Debate

8 years 7 months ago
Joint Models of Disagreement and Stance in Online Debate
Online debate forums present a valuable opportunity for the understanding and modeling of dialogue. To understand these debates, a key challenge is inferring the stances of the participants, all of which are interrelated and dependent. While collectively modeling users’ stances has been shown to be effective (Walker et al., 2012c; Hasan and Ng, 2013), there are many modeling decisions whose ramifications are not well understood. To investigate these choices and their effects, we introduce a scalable unified probabilistic modeling framework for stance classification models that 1) are collective, 2) reason about disagreement, and 3) can model stance at either the author level or at the post level. We comprehensively evaluate the possible modeling choices on eight topics across two online debate corpora, finding accuracy improvements of
Dhanya Sridhar, James R. Foulds, Bert Huang, Lise
Added 13 Apr 2016
Updated 13 Apr 2016
Type Journal
Year 2015
Where ACL
Authors Dhanya Sridhar, James R. Foulds, Bert Huang, Lise Getoor, Marilyn A. Walker
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