Improved and Robust Controversy Detection in General Web Pages Using Semantic Approaches under Large Scale Conditions

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 2018
Book title CIKM'18
Book subtitle proceedings of the 2018 ACM International Conference on Information and Knowledge Management : October 22-26, 2018, Torino, Italy
ISBN (electronic)
  • 9781450360142
Event 27th ACM International Conference on Information and Knowledge Management
Pages (from-to) 1647-1650
Number of pages 4
Publisher New York, NY: The Association for Computing Machinery
Organisations
  • Faculty of Economics and Business (FEB) - Amsterdam Business School Research Institute (ABS-RI)
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Informatics Institute (IVI)
Abstract
Detecting controversy in general web pages is a daunting task, but increasingly essential to efficiently moderate discussions and effectively filter problematic content. Unfortunately, controversies occur across many topics and domains, with great changes over time. This paper investigates neural classifiers as a more robust methodology for controversy detection in general web pages. Current models have often cast controversy detection on general web pages as Wikipedia linking, or exact lexical matching tasks. The diverse and changing nature of controversies suggest that semantic approaches are better able to detect controversy. We train neural networks that can capture semantic information from texts using weak signal data. By leveraging the semantic properties of word embeddings we robustly improve on existing controversy detection methods. To evaluate model stability over time and to unseen topics, we asses model performance under varying training conditions to test cross-temporal, cross-topic, cross-domain performance and annotator congruence. In doing so, we demonstrate that weak-signal based neural approaches are closer to human estimates of controversy and are more robust to the inherent variability of controversies.
Document type Conference contribution
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1145/3269206.3269301
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