Xiang, Rong and Chersoni, Emmanuele and Lu, Qin and Huang, Chu‐Ren and Li, Wenjie and Long, Yunfei (2021) Lexical data augmentation for sentiment analysis. Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology, 72 (11). pp. 1432-1447. DOI https://doi.org/10.1002/asi.24493
Xiang, Rong and Chersoni, Emmanuele and Lu, Qin and Huang, Chu‐Ren and Li, Wenjie and Long, Yunfei (2021) Lexical data augmentation for sentiment analysis. Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology, 72 (11). pp. 1432-1447. DOI https://doi.org/10.1002/asi.24493
Xiang, Rong and Chersoni, Emmanuele and Lu, Qin and Huang, Chu‐Ren and Li, Wenjie and Long, Yunfei (2021) Lexical data augmentation for sentiment analysis. Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology, 72 (11). pp. 1432-1447. DOI https://doi.org/10.1002/asi.24493
Abstract
Machine learning methods, especially deep learning models, have achieved impressive performance in various natural language processing tasks including sentiment analysis. However, deep learning models are more demanding for training data. Data augmentation techniques are widely used to generate new instances based on modifications to existing data or relying on external knowledge bases to address annotated data scarcity, which hinders the full potential of machine learning techniques. This paper presents our work using part-of-speech (POS) focused lexical substitution for data augmentation (PLSDA) to enhance the performance of machine learning algorithms in sentiment analysis. We exploit POS information to identify words to be replaced and investigate different augmentation strategies to find semantically related substitutions when generating new instances. The choice of POS tags as well as a variety of strategies such as semantic-based substitution methods and sampling methods are discussed in detail. Performance evaluation focuses on the comparison between PLSDA and two previous lexical substitution-based data augmentation methods, one of which is thesaurus-based, and the other is lexicon manipulation based. Our approach is tested on five English sentiment analysis benchmarks: SST-2, MR, IMDB, Twitter, and AirRecord. Hyperparameters such as the candidate similarity threshold and number of newly generated instances are optimized. Results show that six classifiers (SVM, LSTM, BiLSTM-AT, bidirectional encoder representations from transformers [BERT], XLNet, and RoBERTa) trained with PLSDA achieve accuracy improvement of more than 0.6% comparing to two previous lexical substitution methods averaged on five benchmarks. Introducing POS constraint and well-designed augmentation strategies can improve the reliability of lexical data augmentation methods. Consequently, PLSDA significantly improves the performance of sentiment analysis algorithms.
Item Type: | Article |
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Divisions: | Faculty of Science and Health Faculty of Science and Health > Computer Science and Electronic Engineering, School of |
SWORD Depositor: | Unnamed user with email elements@essex.ac.uk |
Depositing User: | Unnamed user with email elements@essex.ac.uk |
Date Deposited: | 23 Jun 2021 09:41 |
Last Modified: | 30 Oct 2024 17:18 |
URI: | http://repository.essex.ac.uk/id/eprint/30649 |
Available files
Filename: asi.24493.pdf
Licence: Creative Commons: Attribution 3.0