0000000000121376

AUTHOR

Darren Gergle

0000-0003-4052-0214

showing 2 related works from this author

The language of emotion in short blog texts

2008

Emotion is central to human interactions, and automatic detection could enhance our experience with technologies. We investigate the linguistic expression of fine-grained emotion in 50 and 200 word samples of real blog texts previously coded by expert and naive raters. Content analysis (LIWC) reveals angry authors use more affective language and negative affect words, and that joyful authors use more positive affect words. Additionally, a co-occurrence semantic space approach (LSA) was able to identify fear (which naive human emotion raters could not do). We relate our findings to human emotion perception and note potential computational applications.

Expression (architecture)Content analysisbusiness.industryEmotion perceptionSemantic spaceArtificial intelligencePsychologycomputer.software_genreAffect (psychology)businesscomputerNatural language processingCognitive psychologyProceedings of the 2008 ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work
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Emotion rating from short blog texts

2008

Being able to automatically perceive a variety of emotions from text alone has potentially important applications in CMC and HCI that range from identifying mood from online posts to enabling dynamically adaptive interfaces. However, such ability has not been proven in human raters or computational systems. Here we examine the ability of naive raters of emotion to detect one of eight emotional categories from 50 and 200 word samples of real blog text. Using expert raters as a 'gold standard', naive-expert rater agreement increased with longer texts, and was high for ratings of joy, disgust, anger and anticipation, but low for acceptance and 'neutral' texts. We discuss these findings in ligh…

World Wide WebInformationSystems_MODELSANDPRINCIPLESMoodmedia_common.quotation_subjectAffect (linguistics)Computer-mediated communicationAngerVariety (linguistics)PsychologyAnticipationDisgustmedia_commonCognitive psychologyProceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
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