Qing Liao
2026
Cognitive Policy-Driven LLM for Diagnosis and Intervention of Cognitive Distortions in Emotional Support Conversation
Lin Zhong | Renjin Zhu | Shujuan Ma | Jinhao Cui | Lingzhi Wang | Hao Chen | Qing Liao
Proceedings of the 64th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)
Lin Zhong | Renjin Zhu | Shujuan Ma | Jinhao Cui | Lingzhi Wang | Hao Chen | Qing Liao
Proceedings of the 64th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)
Emotional Support Conversation (ESC) plays a critical role in mental health assistance by providing accessible psychological support in real-world applications. Large Language Models (LLMs) have shown strong empathetic abilities in ESC tasks. Yet, existing methods overlook the issue of cognitive distortions in help-seekers’ expressions. As a result, current models can only provide basic emotional comfort, rather than helping help-seekers address their psychological distress at a deeper cognitive level. To address this challenge, we construct the CogBiasESC dataset, the first dataset that expands existing ESC datasets by adding labels for cognitive distortions, includes their type, intensity, and safe risk level. Furthermore, we propose the Cognitive Policy-driven Large Language Model framework (CoPoLLM) to enhance LLMs’ ability to diagnose and intervene cognitive distortions in help-seekers. We also analyze the safety advantages of CoPoLLM from a theoretical perspective. Experimental results show that CoPoLLM significantly outperforms 15 state-of-the-art baselines in terms of distortion diagnosis accuracy, intervention strategy effectiveness, and safety risk control. Our source code is available at: https://github.com/Chips98/CoPoLLM-for-ACL-2026.
TwiUSD: A Benchmark Dataset and Structure-Aware LLM Framework for User Stance Detection
Fuqiang Niu | Zini Chen | Zhiyu Xie | Hu Huang | Qing Liao | Qianlong Wang | Genan Dai | Bowen Zhang
Proceedings of the 64th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)
Fuqiang Niu | Zini Chen | Zhiyu Xie | Hu Huang | Qing Liao | Qianlong Wang | Genan Dai | Bowen Zhang
Proceedings of the 64th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)
Political user-level stance detection is vital for analyzing polarization, yet progress is hindered by the scarcity of high-quality benchmarks integrating linguistic and social signals. Existing datasets, largely relying on noisy heuristic or distant supervision, limit model robustness and generalizability. To address this, we introduce TwiUSD, a large-scale, expert-annotated benchmark for political user-level stance detection with explicit social network structure. TwiUSD comprises 16,211 users and 47,757 tweets, labeled by domain experts using a protocol that integrates both user content and followee signals, ensuring high-quality annotations (kappa > 0.9). Building upon TwiUSD, we propose MRFG, a Multi-scale Relevance Filtering and Graph-aware framework that leverages large language models to filter stance-relevant followee content and adaptively routes features based on structural informativeness. This design enables robust stance prediction by jointly modeling semantic and relational cues. Extensive experiments show that MRFG significantly outperforms strong baselines, highlighting the importance of relevance filtering and structure-aware modeling.
2025
FedCSR: A Federated Framework for Multi-Platform Cross-Domain Sequential Recommendation with Dual Contrastive Learning
Dongyi Zheng | Hongyu Zhang | Jianyang Zhai | Lin Zhong | Lingzhi Wang | Jiyuan Feng | Xiangke Liao | Yonghong Tian | Nong Xiao | Qing Liao
Proceedings of the 31st International Conference on Computational Linguistics
Dongyi Zheng | Hongyu Zhang | Jianyang Zhai | Lin Zhong | Lingzhi Wang | Jiyuan Feng | Xiangke Liao | Yonghong Tian | Nong Xiao | Qing Liao
Proceedings of the 31st International Conference on Computational Linguistics
Cross-domain sequential recommendation (CSR) has garnered significant attention. Current federated frameworks for CSR leverage information across multiple domains but often rely on user alignment, which increases communication costs and privacy risks. In this work, we propose FedCSR, a novel federated cross-domain sequential recommendation framework that eliminates the need for user alignment between platforms. FedCSR fully utilizes cross-domain knowledge to address the key challenges related to data heterogeneity both inter- and intra-platform. To tackle the heterogeneity of data patterns between platforms, we introduce Model Contrastive Learning (MCL) to reduce the gap between local and global models. Additionally, we design Sequence Contrastive Learning (SCL) to address the heterogeneity of user preferences across different domains within a platform by employing tailored sequence augmentation techniques. Extensive experiments conducted on multiple real-world datasets demonstrate that FedCSR achieves superior performance compared to existing baseline methods.
2023
HITSZQ at SemEval-2023 Task 10: Category-aware Sexism Detection Model with Self-training Strategy
Ziyi Yao | Heyan Chai | Jinhao Cui | Siyu Tang | Qing Liao
Proceedings of the 17th International Workshop on Semantic Evaluation (SemEval-2023)
Ziyi Yao | Heyan Chai | Jinhao Cui | Siyu Tang | Qing Liao
Proceedings of the 17th International Workshop on Semantic Evaluation (SemEval-2023)
This paper describes our system used in the SemEval-2023 \textit{Task 10 Explainable Detection of Online Sexism (EDOS)}. Specifically, we participated in subtask B: a 4-class sexism classification task, and subtask C: a more fine-grained (11-class) sexism classification task, where it is necessary to predict the category of sexism. We treat these two subtasks as one multi-label hierarchical text classification problem, and propose an integrated sexism detection model for improving the performance of the sexism detection task. More concretely, we use the pre-trained BERT model to encode the text and class label and a hierarchy-relevant structure encoder is employed to model the relationship between classes of subtasks B and C. Additionally, a self-training strategy is designed to alleviate the imbalanced problem of distribution classes. Extensive experiments on subtasks B and C demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposed approach.
Aspect-to-Scope Oriented Multi-view Contrastive Learning for Aspect-based Sentiment Analysis
Heyan Chai | Ziyi Yao | Siyu Tang | Ye Wang | Liqiang Nie | Binxing Fang | Qing Liao
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: EMNLP 2023
Heyan Chai | Ziyi Yao | Siyu Tang | Ye Wang | Liqiang Nie | Binxing Fang | Qing Liao
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: EMNLP 2023
Aspect-based sentiment analysis (ABSA) aims to align aspects and corresponding sentiment expressions, so as to identify the sentiment polarities of specific aspects. Most existing ABSA methods focus on mining syntactic or semantic information, which still suffers from noisy interference introduced by the attention mechanism and dependency tree when multiple aspects exist in a sentence. To address these issues, in this paper, we revisit ABSA from a novel perspective by proposing a novel scope-assisted multi-view graph contrastive learning framework. It not only mitigates noisy interference for better locating aspect and its corresponding sentiment opinion with aspect-specific scope, but also captures the correlation and difference between sentiment polarities and syntactic/semantic information. Extensive experiments on five benchmark datasets show that our proposed approach substantially outperforms state-of-the-art methods and verifies the effectiveness and robustness of our model.
Improving Gradient Trade-offs between Tasks in Multi-task Text Classification
Heyan Chai | Jinhao Cui | Ye Wang | Min Zhang | Binxing Fang | Qing Liao
Proceedings of the 61st Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)
Heyan Chai | Jinhao Cui | Ye Wang | Min Zhang | Binxing Fang | Qing Liao
Proceedings of the 61st Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)
Multi-task learning (MTL) has emerged as a promising approach for sharing inductive bias across multiple tasks to enable more efficient learning in text classification. However, training all tasks simultaneously often yields degraded performance of each task than learning them independently, since different tasks might conflict with each other. Existing MTL methods for alleviating this issue is to leverage heuristics or gradient-based algorithm to achieve an arbitrary Pareto optimal trade-off among different tasks. In this paper, we present a novel gradient trade-off approach to mitigate the task conflict problem, dubbed GetMTL, which can achieve a specific trade-off among different tasks nearby the main objective of multi-task text classification (MTC), so as to improve the performance of each task simultaneously. The results of extensive experiments on two benchmark datasets back up our theoretical analysis and validate the superiority of our proposed GetMTL.
2022
Affective Knowledge Enhanced Multiple-Graph Fusion Networks for Aspect-based Sentiment Analysis
Siyu Tang | Heyan Chai | Ziyi Yao | Ye Ding | Cuiyun Gao | Binxing Fang | Qing Liao
Proceedings of the 2022 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing
Siyu Tang | Heyan Chai | Ziyi Yao | Ye Ding | Cuiyun Gao | Binxing Fang | Qing Liao
Proceedings of the 2022 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing
Aspect-based sentiment analysis aims to identify sentiment polarity of social media users toward different aspects. Most recent methods adopt the aspect-centric latent tree to connect aspects and their corresponding opinion words, thinking that would facilitate establishing the relationship between aspects and opinion words.However, these methods ignore the roles of syntax dependency relation labels and affective semantic information in determining the sentiment polarity, resulting in the wrong prediction.In this paper, we propose a novel multi-graph fusion network (MGFN) based on latent graph to leverage the richer syntax dependency relation label information and affective semantic information of words.Specifically, we construct a novel syntax-aware latent graph (SaLG) to fully leverage the syntax dependency relation label information to facilitate the learning of sentiment representations. Subsequently, a multi-graph fusion module is proposed to fuse semantic information of surrounding contexts of aspects adaptively. Furthermore, we design an affective refinement strategy to guide the MGFN to capture significant affective clues. Extensive experiments on three datasets demonstrate that our MGFN model outperforms all state-of-the-art methods and verify the effectiveness of our model.
Improving Multi-task Stance Detection with Multi-task Interaction Network
Heyan Chai | Siyu Tang | Jinhao Cui | Ye Ding | Binxing Fang | Qing Liao
Proceedings of the 2022 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing
Heyan Chai | Siyu Tang | Jinhao Cui | Ye Ding | Binxing Fang | Qing Liao
Proceedings of the 2022 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing
Stance detection aims to identify people’s standpoints expressed in the text towards a target, which can provide powerful information for various downstream tasks.Recent studies have proposed multi-task learning models that introduce sentiment information to boost stance detection.However, they neglect to explore capturing the fine-grained task-specific interaction between stance detection and sentiment tasks, thus degrading performance.To address this issue, this paper proposes a novel multi-task interaction network (MTIN) for improving the performance of stance detection and sentiment analysis tasks simultaneously.Specifically, we construct heterogeneous task-related graphs to automatically identify and adapt the roles that a word plays with respect to a specific task. Also, a multi-task interaction module is designed to capture the word-level interaction between tasks, so as to obtain richer task representations.Extensive experiments on two real-world datasets show that our proposed approach outperforms state-of-the-art methods in both stance detection and sentiment analysis tasks.
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- Heyan Chai 5
- Jinhao Cui 4
- Binxing Fang 4
- Siyu Tang 4
- Ziyi Yao 3
- Ye Ding 2
- Lingzhi Wang 2
- Ye Wang 2
- Hao Chen 1
- Zini Chen 1
- Genan Dai 1
- Jiyuan Feng 1
- Cuiyun Gao 1
- Hu Huang 1
- Xiangke Liao 1
- Shujuan Ma 1
- Liqiang Nie 1
- Fuqiang Niu 1
- Yonghong Tian 1
- Qianlong Wang 1
- Nong Xiao 1
- Zhiyu Xie 1
- Jianyang Zhai 1
- Bowen Zhang 1
- Hongyu Zhang 1
- Min Zhang 1
- Dongyi Zheng 1
- Lin Zhong 1
- Lin Zhong 1
- Renjin Zhu 1