Alda Mari


2022

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Give me your Intentions, I’ll Predict our Actions: A Two-level Classification of Speech Acts for Crisis Management in Social Media
Enzo Laurenti | Nils Bourgon | Farah Benamara | Alda Mari | Véronique Moriceau | Camille Courgeon
Proceedings of the Thirteenth Language Resources and Evaluation Conference

Discovered by (Austin,1962) and extensively promoted by (Searle, 1975), speech acts (SA) have been the object of extensive discussion in the philosophical and the linguistic literature, as well as in computational linguistics where the detection of SA have shown to be an important step in many down stream NLP applications. In this paper, we attempt to measure for the first time the role of SA on urgency detection in tweets, focusing on natural disasters. Indeed, SA are particularly relevant to identify intentions, desires, plans and preferences towards action, providing therefore actionable information that will help to set priorities for the human teams and decide appropriate rescue actions. To this end, we come up here with four main contributions: (1) A two-layer annotation scheme of SA both at the tweet and subtweet levels, (2) A new French dataset of 6,669 tweets annotated for both urgency and SA, (3) An in-depth analysis of the annotation campaign, highlighting the correlation between SA and urgency categories, and (4) A set of deep learning experiments to detect SA in a crisis corpus. Our results show that SA are correlated with urgency which is a first important step towards SA-aware NLP-based crisis management on social media.

2020

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He said “who’s gonna take care of your children when you are at ACL?”: Reported Sexist Acts are Not Sexist
Patricia Chiril | Véronique Moriceau | Farah Benamara | Alda Mari | Gloria Origgi | Marlène Coulomb-Gully
Proceedings of the 58th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics

In a context of offensive content mediation on social media now regulated by European laws, it is important not only to be able to automatically detect sexist content but also to identify if a message with a sexist content is really sexist or is a story of sexism experienced by a woman. We propose: (1) a new characterization of sexist content inspired by speech acts theory and discourse analysis studies, (2) the first French dataset annotated for sexism detection, and (3) a set of deep learning experiments trained on top of a combination of several tweet’s vectorial representations (word embeddings, linguistic features, and various generalization strategies). Our results are encouraging and constitute a first step towards offensive content moderation.

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An Annotated Corpus for Sexism Detection in French Tweets
Patricia Chiril | Véronique Moriceau | Farah Benamara | Alda Mari | Gloria Origgi | Marlène Coulomb-Gully
Proceedings of the Twelfth Language Resources and Evaluation Conference

Social media networks have become a space where users are free to relate their opinions and sentiments which may lead to a large spreading of hatred or abusive messages which have to be moderated. This paper presents the first French corpus annotated for sexism detection composed of about 12,000 tweets. In a context of offensive content mediation on social media now regulated by European laws, we think that it is important to be able to detect automatically not only sexist content but also to identify if a message with a sexist content is really sexist (i.e. addressed to a woman or describing a woman or women in general) or is a story of sexism experienced by a woman. This point is the novelty of our annotation scheme. We also propose some preliminary results for sexism detection obtained with a deep learning approach. Our experiments show encouraging results.

2006

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A Conceptual Analysis of the Notion of Instrumentality via a Multilingual Analysis
Asanee Kawtrakul | Mukda Suktarachan | Bali Ranaivo-Malancon | Pek Kuan | Achla Raina | Sudeshna Sarkar | Alda Mari | Sina Zarriess | Elixabete Murguia | Patrick Saint-Dizier
Proceedings of the Third ACL-SIGSEM Workshop on Prepositions

2002

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Under-specification and contextual variability of abstract
Alda Mari
Proceedings of the ACL-02 Workshop on Word Sense Disambiguation: Recent Successes and Future Directions