Indian Language Benchmark Portal

2 results
Sort:

Please Login/Register to submit the new Resources

Gender Prediction in English-Hindi Code-Mixed Social Media Content : Corpus and Baseline System
Ankush KhandelwalSahil SwamiSyed Sarfaraz AkhtarManish Shrivastava

The rapid expansion in the usage of social media networking sites leads to a huge amount of unprocessed user generated data which can be used for text mining. Author profiling is the problem of automatically determining profiling aspects like the author's gender and age group through a text is gaining much popularity in computational linguistics. Most of the past research in author profiling is concentrated on English texts \cite{1,2}. However many users often change the language while posting on social media which is called code-mixing, and it develops some challenges in the field of text classification and author profiling like variations in spelling, non-grammatical structure and transliteration \cite{3}. There are very few English-Hindi code-mixed annotated datasets of social media content present online \cite{4}. In this paper, we analyze the task of author's gender prediction in code-mixed content and present a corpus of English-Hindi texts collected from Twitter which is annotated with author's gender. We also explore language identification of every word in this corpus. We present a supervised classification baseline system which uses various machine learning algorithms to identify the gender of an author using a text, based on character and word level features.

A Corpus of English-Hindi Code-Mixed Tweets for Sarcasm Detection
Sahil SwamiAnkush KhandelwalVinay SinghSyed Sarfaraz AkhtarManish Shrivastava

Social media platforms like twitter and facebook have be- come two of the largest mediums used by people to express their views to- wards different topics. Generation of such large user data has made NLP tasks like sentiment analysis and opinion mining much more important. Using sarcasm in texts on social media has become a popular trend lately. Using sarcasm reverses the meaning and polarity of what is implied by the text which poses challenge for many NLP tasks. The task of sarcasm detection in text is gaining more and more importance for both commer- cial and security services. We present the first English-Hindi code-mixed dataset of tweets marked for presence of sarcasm and irony where each token is also annotated with a language tag. We present a baseline su- pervised classification system developed using the same dataset which achieves an average F-score of 78.4 after using random forest classifier and performing 10-fold cross validation.

Filter by Author
P. D. Gujrati (8)
Manish Shrivastava (7)
Partha Pratim Roy (5)
Umapada Pal (5)
Ayan Kumar Bhunia (4)
Iti Mathur (4)
More