Jhuma kabir Mim

h-index11
2papers

2 Papers

CLMar 30, 2024
A Comprehensive Study on NLP Data Augmentation for Hate Speech Detection: Legacy Methods, BERT, and LLMs

Md Saroar Jahan, Mourad Oussalah, Djamila Romaissa Beddia et al.

The surge of interest in data augmentation within the realm of NLP has been driven by the need to address challenges posed by hate speech domains, the dynamic nature of social media vocabulary, and the demands for large-scale neural networks requiring extensive training data. However, the prevalent use of lexical substitution in data augmentation has raised concerns, as it may inadvertently alter the intended meaning, thereby impacting the efficacy of supervised machine learning models. In pursuit of suitable data augmentation methods, this study explores both established legacy approaches and contemporary practices such as Large Language Models (LLM), including GPT in Hate Speech detection. Additionally, we propose an optimized utilization of BERT-based encoder models with contextual cosine similarity filtration, exposing significant limitations in prior synonym substitution methods. Our comparative analysis encompasses five popular augmentation techniques: WordNet and Fast-Text synonym replacement, Back-translation, BERT-mask contextual augmentation, and LLM. Our analysis across five benchmarked datasets revealed that while traditional methods like back-translation show low label alteration rates (0.3-1.5%), and BERT-based contextual synonym replacement offers sentence diversity but at the cost of higher label alteration rates (over 6%). Our proposed BERT-based contextual cosine similarity filtration markedly reduced label alteration to just 0.05%, demonstrating its efficacy in 0.7% higher F1 performance. However, augmenting data with GPT-3 not only avoided overfitting with up to sevenfold data increase but also improved embedding space coverage by 15% and classification F1 score by 1.4% over traditional methods, and by 0.8% over our method.

CLDec 16, 2023
Cross-Linguistic Offensive Language Detection: BERT-Based Analysis of Bengali, Assamese, & Bodo Conversational Hateful Content from Social Media

Jhuma Kabir Mim, Mourad Oussalah, Akash Singhal

In today's age, social media reigns as the paramount communication platform, providing individuals with the avenue to express their conjectures, intellectual propositions, and reflections. Unfortunately, this freedom often comes with a downside as it facilitates the widespread proliferation of hate speech and offensive content, leaving a deleterious impact on our world. Thus, it becomes essential to discern and eradicate such offensive material from the realm of social media. This article delves into the comprehensive results and key revelations from the HASOC-2023 offensive language identification result. The primary emphasis is placed on the meticulous detection of hate speech within the linguistic domains of Bengali, Assamese, and Bodo, forming the framework for Task 4: Annihilate Hates. In this work, we used BERT models, including XML-Roberta, L3-cube, IndicBERT, BenglaBERT, and BanglaHateBERT. The research outcomes were promising and showed that XML-Roberta-lagre performed better than monolingual models in most cases. Our team 'TeamBD' achieved rank 3rd for Task 4 - Assamese, & 5th for Bengali.