CLMar 2, 2024

Emotion Analysis in NLP: Trends, Gaps and Roadmap for Future Directions

arXiv:2403.01222v293 citationsh-index: 14LREC
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This is an incremental review paper that identifies gaps in emotion analysis research for NLP researchers.

This paper reviews 154 NLP publications on emotion analysis to identify trends and gaps, finding that current approaches lack consideration of demographic/cultural factors, have poor fit of emotion theories, lack standardized terminology, and suffer from interdisciplinary isolation.

Emotions are a central aspect of communication. Consequently, emotion analysis (EA) is a rapidly growing field in natural language processing (NLP). However, there is no consensus on scope, direction, or methods. In this paper, we conduct a thorough review of 154 relevant NLP publications from the last decade. Based on this review, we address four different questions: (1) How are EA tasks defined in NLP? (2) What are the most prominent emotion frameworks and which emotions are modeled? (3) Is the subjectivity of emotions considered in terms of demographics and cultural factors? and (4) What are the primary NLP applications for EA? We take stock of trends in EA and tasks, emotion frameworks used, existing datasets, methods, and applications. We then discuss four lacunae: (1) the absence of demographic and cultural aspects does not account for the variation in how emotions are perceived, but instead assumes they are universally experienced in the same manner; (2) the poor fit of emotion categories from the two main emotion theories to the task; (3) the lack of standardized EA terminology hinders gap identification, comparison, and future goals; and (4) the absence of interdisciplinary research isolates EA from insights in other fields. Our work will enable more focused research into EA and a more holistic approach to modeling emotions in NLP.

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