CLAug 28, 2013

Crowdsourcing a Word-Emotion Association Lexicon

arXiv:1308.6297v12620 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of limited emotion lexicons for researchers in emotion analysis, though it is incremental as it builds on existing crowdsourcing and annotation methods.

The paper tackled the lack of large emotion lexicons for emotion analysis by using crowdsourcing to create a high-quality word-emotion and word-polarity association lexicon quickly and inexpensively, achieving higher inter-annotator agreement through improved question formulation.

Even though considerable attention has been given to the polarity of words (positive and negative) and the creation of large polarity lexicons, research in emotion analysis has had to rely on limited and small emotion lexicons. In this paper we show how the combined strength and wisdom of the crowds can be used to generate a large, high-quality, word-emotion and word-polarity association lexicon quickly and inexpensively. We enumerate the challenges in emotion annotation in a crowdsourcing scenario and propose solutions to address them. Most notably, in addition to questions about emotions associated with terms, we show how the inclusion of a word choice question can discourage malicious data entry, help identify instances where the annotator may not be familiar with the target term (allowing us to reject such annotations), and help obtain annotations at sense level (rather than at word level). We conducted experiments on how to formulate the emotion-annotation questions, and show that asking if a term is associated with an emotion leads to markedly higher inter-annotator agreement than that obtained by asking if a term evokes an emotion.

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