TY - JOUR
T1 - Joint emotion label space modeling for affect lexica
AU - De Bruyne, Luna
AU - Atanasova, Pepa
AU - Augenstein, Isabelle
PY - 2022/1
Y1 - 2022/1
N2 - Emotion lexica are commonly used resources to combat data poverty in automatic emotion detection. However, vocabulary coverage issues, differences in construction method and discrepancies in emotion framework and representation result in a heterogeneous landscape of emotion detection resources, calling for a unified approach to utilizing them. To combat this, we present an extended emotion lexicon of 30,273 unique entries, which is a result of merging eight existing emotion lexica by means of a multi-view variational autoencoder (VAE). We showed that a VAE is a valid approach for combining lexica with different label spaces into a joint emotion label space with a chosen number of dimensions, and that these dimensions are still interpretable. We tested the utility of the unified VAE lexicon by employing the lexicon values as features in an emotion detection model. We found that the VAE lexicon outperformed individual lexica, but contrary to our expectations, it did not outperform a naive concatenation of lexica, although it did contribute to the naive concatenation when added as an extra lexicon. Furthermore, using lexicon information as additional features on top of state-of-the-art language models usually resulted in a better performance than when no lexicon information was used.
AB - Emotion lexica are commonly used resources to combat data poverty in automatic emotion detection. However, vocabulary coverage issues, differences in construction method and discrepancies in emotion framework and representation result in a heterogeneous landscape of emotion detection resources, calling for a unified approach to utilizing them. To combat this, we present an extended emotion lexicon of 30,273 unique entries, which is a result of merging eight existing emotion lexica by means of a multi-view variational autoencoder (VAE). We showed that a VAE is a valid approach for combining lexica with different label spaces into a joint emotion label space with a chosen number of dimensions, and that these dimensions are still interpretable. We tested the utility of the unified VAE lexicon by employing the lexicon values as features in an emotion detection model. We found that the VAE lexicon outperformed individual lexica, but contrary to our expectations, it did not outperform a naive concatenation of lexica, although it did contribute to the naive concatenation when added as an extra lexicon. Furthermore, using lexicon information as additional features on top of state-of-the-art language models usually resulted in a better performance than when no lexicon information was used.
KW - Emotion detection
KW - Emotion lexica
KW - NLP
KW - VAE
U2 - 10.1016/j.csl.2021.101257
DO - 10.1016/j.csl.2021.101257
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:85111060499
VL - 71
JO - Computer Speech and Language
JF - Computer Speech and Language
SN - 0885-2308
M1 - 101257
ER -