Evaluating Compositional Approaches for Focus and Sentiment Analysis

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Identifiers

Publication date

Authors

Kellert, Olga
Matlis, Nicholas
Zaman, Mahmud Uz

Advisors

Other responsabilities

Journal Title

Bibliographic citation

Kellert, O., Imran, M., Matlis, N., Uz Zaman, M., Gómez-Rodríguez, C. (2025). Evaluating Compositional Approaches for Focus and Sentiment Analysis. In: Arai, K. (eds) Intelligent Computing. CompCom 2025. Lecture Notes in Networks and Systems, vol 1423. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-92602-0_27

Type of academic work

Academic degree

Abstract

[Abstract]: This paper summarizes the results of evaluating a compositional approach for Focus Analysis (FA) in Linguistics and Sentiment Analysis (SA) in Natural Language Processing (NLP). While quantitative evaluations of compositional and non-compositional approaches in SA exist in NLP, similar quantitative evaluations are very rare in FA in Linguistics that deal with linguistic expressions representing focus or emphasis such as “it was John who left". We fill this gap in research by arguing that compositional rules in SA also apply to FA because FA and SA are closely related meaning that SA is part of FA. Our compositional approach in SA exploits basic syntactic rules such as rules of modification, coordination, and negation represented in the formalism of Universal Dependencies (UDs) in English and applied to words representing sentiments from sentiment dictionaries. Some of the advantages of our compositional analysis method for SA in contrast to non-compositional analysis methods are interpretability and explainability. We test the accuracy of our compositional approach and compare it with a non-compositional approach VADER that uses simple heuristic rules to deal with negation, coordination and modification. In contrast to previous related work that evaluates compositionality in SA on long reviews, this study uses more appropriate datasets to evaluate compositionality. In addition, we generalize the results of compositional approaches in SA to compositional approaches in FA.

Description

This version of the conference paper has been accepted for publication, after peer review. The Version of Record is available online at: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-92602-0_27. Presented at: CompCom 2025, 19-20 June London, United Kingdom. Part of the book series: Lecture Notes in Networks and Systems (LNNS,volume 1423).

Rights

© 2025 The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG. Subject to Springer Nature’s AM terms of use (https://www.springernature.com/gp/open-research/policies/accepted-manuscript-terms), but is not the Version of Record and does not reflect post-acceptance improvements, or any corrections.