Difference between revisions of "Esuli and Sebastiani ACT2007"

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== Discussion ==
 
== Discussion ==
First of all, I have to say it's '''not a self-contained''' paper, it '''depends on another paper''' heavily and it's '''not a creative work'''. This paper didn't change much from the [[Tsur_et_al_ICWSM_10|AAAI 2010 paper]]. The only thing that this paper did is changed some small setting of previous paper: the algorithm follows [[Tsur_et_al_ICWSM_10|AAAI 2010 paper]], the feature follows the ACL 2006 paper [http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&cad=rja&ved=0CCYQFjAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fleibniz.cs.huji.ac.il%2Ftr%2F884.pdf&ei=f4doUN7hOq-O0QGYv4CQCg&usg=AFQjCNHmMVwq0zPYDEhpaScToMm5iVNO0A&sig2=jp-5-01q-OzlAY3AbIhntQ]
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This paper addresses the problem of judging how positive or negative or neutral a word (here is more about [[WordNet]] synset) is, which is one of major task in [[sentiment analysis]]. In this paper, the authors proposed to leverage [[PageRank]] algorithm on the graph built on [[WordNet]] synset. Under the intuition that if a synset sk that contributes to the definition of synset si by virtue of its member terms occurring in the gloss of si, then the polarity of synset sk contributes to the polarity of synset si, the authors built the graph as G=(V.E) where V is all [[WordNet]] synsets and edge (si -> sk) is in E if and only if the gloss of synset si contains a term belonging to synset sk.
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The strong points of the paper includes:
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  1. It first introduced PageRank into solving the words (or synset) polarity problem.
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  2. It considered positivity and negativity separately so that it can classify words (or synset) into three categories: positive, negative and neutral.
  
 
The weak point of the paper includes:
 
The weak point of the paper includes:
   1. It haven't any significant change to previous methods
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   1. This paper defined, solved and evaluated the problem on [[WordNet]] synsets, but [[WordNet]] synsets is not what we meet in real text. As a result, I think it might be better if the authors can provide a method to convert words into [[WordNet]] synsets and evaluate the proposed method on real world text.
   2. It depended on another paper so heavy that the algorithm is not complete without that paper.
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   2. It didn't consider the POS tag. We know that sense of words might vary a lot on different POS tags. As a result, even if a term in sk occurs in the gloss of si, it not necessarily suggest that the term represents the meaning of synset sk, thus sk might have different polarity with si.
   3. It didn't consider any baseline algorithms. For example, they can compare their method to other semi-supervised methods or related sarcasm detection methods.
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   3. The degree of a node is associated with the length of definition, which has nothing to do with the polarity.
  
 
== Related papers ==
 
== Related papers ==

Revision as of 22:17, 30 September 2012

Citation

PageRanking WordNet Synsets: An Application to Opionion Mining,

Andrea Esuli and Fabrizio Sebastiani

Online version

PageRanking WordNet Synsets: An Application to Opionion Mining

Summary

The key idea in this paper is to use PageRank algorithm to rank the "most" positive or negative synset in WordNet. As PageRank is a well studied algorithm, the most challenging part is how to construct a meaningful directed graph from WordNet. In this paper, the author explored one relation: if the gloss of synset si contains a term belonging to synset sk, then draw an edge si -> sk.

They experimented on one benchmark dataset: Mirco-WNOp

Discussion

This paper addresses the problem of judging how positive or negative or neutral a word (here is more about WordNet synset) is, which is one of major task in sentiment analysis. In this paper, the authors proposed to leverage PageRank algorithm on the graph built on WordNet synset. Under the intuition that if a synset sk that contributes to the definition of synset si by virtue of its member terms occurring in the gloss of si, then the polarity of synset sk contributes to the polarity of synset si, the authors built the graph as G=(V.E) where V is all WordNet synsets and edge (si -> sk) is in E if and only if the gloss of synset si contains a term belonging to synset sk.

The strong points of the paper includes:

 1. It first introduced PageRank into solving the words (or synset) polarity problem.
 2. It considered positivity and negativity separately so that it can classify words (or synset) into three categories: positive, negative and neutral.

The weak point of the paper includes:

 1. This paper defined, solved and evaluated the problem on WordNet synsets, but WordNet synsets is not what we meet in real text. As a result, I think it might be better if the authors can provide a method to convert words into WordNet synsets and evaluate the proposed method on real world text.
 2. It didn't consider the POS tag. We know that sense of words might vary a lot on different POS tags. As a result, even if a term in sk occurs in the gloss of si, it not necessarily suggest that the term represents the meaning of synset sk, thus sk might have different polarity with si.
 3. The degree of a node is associated with the length of definition, which has nothing to do with the polarity.

Related papers

  • Paper:Mining WordNet for Fuzzy Sentiment: Sentiment tag extraction from WordNet glosses:[1]
  • Paper:Random walks on text structures:[2]
  • Paper:Using WordNet to measure semantic orientation of adjectives:[3]
  • Paper:SENTIWORDNET: A high-coverage lexical resouce for opinion mining[4]

Study plan

  • Article: WordNet :[5]
  • Article: PageRank :[6]
  • Paper: WordNet 2: A morphologically and semantically enhanced resource :[7]