Huizhe Su;Xinzhi Wang;Jinpeng Li;Shaorong Xie;Xiangfeng Luo
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
In the field of social computing, the task of aspect-based sentiment analysis (ABSA) aims to classify the sentiment polarity of a given aspect in a sentence. The absence of explicit opinion words in the implicit aspect sentiment expressions poses a greater challenge for capturing their sentiment features in the reviews from social media. Many recent efforts use dependency trees or attention mechanisms to model the association between the aspect and other contextual words. However, dependency tree-based methods are inefficient in constructing valuable associations for sentiment classification due to the lack of explicit opinion words. In addition, the use of attention mechanisms to obtain global semantic information easily leads to an undesired focus on irrelevant words that may have sentiments but are not directly related to the specific aspect. In this article, we propose a novel prototype-based demonstration (PD) model for the ABSA task, which contains prototype learning and PD stages. In the prototype learning stage, we employ mask-aware attention to capture the global sentiment feature of aspect and learn sentiment prototypes through contrastive learning. This allows us to acquire comprehensive central semantics of the sentiment polarity that contains the implicit sentiment features. In the PD stage, to provide explicit guidance for the latent knowledge within the T5 model, we utilize prototypes similar to the aspect sentiment as the neural demonstration. Our model outperforms others with a 1.68%/0.28% accuracy gain on the Laptop/Restaurant datasets, especially in the ISE slice, showing improvements of 1.17%/0.26%. These results confirm the superiority of our PD-ABSA in capturing implicit sentiment and improving classification performance. This provides a solution for implicit sentiment classification in social computing.
期刊介绍:
IEEE Transactions on Computational Social Systems focuses on such topics as modeling, simulation, analysis and understanding of social systems from the quantitative and/or computational perspective. "Systems" include man-man, man-machine and machine-machine organizations and adversarial situations as well as social media structures and their dynamics. More specifically, the proposed transactions publishes articles on modeling the dynamics of social systems, methodologies for incorporating and representing socio-cultural and behavioral aspects in computational modeling, analysis of social system behavior and structure, and paradigms for social systems modeling and simulation. The journal also features articles on social network dynamics, social intelligence and cognition, social systems design and architectures, socio-cultural modeling and representation, and computational behavior modeling, and their applications.