@inproceedings{samih-darwish-2021-topical,
title = "A Few Topical Tweets are Enough for Effective User Stance Detection",
author = "Samih, Younes and
Darwish, Kareem",
editor = "Merlo, Paola and
Tiedemann, Jorg and
Tsarfaty, Reut",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 16th Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Main Volume",
month = apr,
year = "2021",
address = "Online",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://preview.aclanthology.org/fix-sig-urls/2021.eacl-main.227/",
doi = "10.18653/v1/2021.eacl-main.227",
pages = "2637--2646",
abstract = "User stance detection entails ascertaining the position of a user towards a target, such as an entity, topic, or claim. Recent work that employs unsupervised classification has shown that performing stance detection on vocal Twitter users, who have many tweets on a target, can be highly accurate (+98{\%}). However, such methods perform poorly or fail completely for less vocal users, who may have authored only a few tweets about a target. In this paper, we tackle stance detection for such users using two approaches. In the first approach, we improve user-level stance detection by representing tweets using contextualized embeddings, which capture latent meanings of words in context. We show that this approach outperforms two strong baselines and achieves 89.6{\%} accuracy and 91.3{\%} macro F-measure on eight controversial topics. In the second approach, we expand the tweets of a given user using their Twitter timeline tweets, which may not be topically relevant, and then we perform unsupervised classification of the user, which entails clustering a user with other users in the training set. This approach achieves 95.6{\%} accuracy and 93.1{\%} macro F-measure."
}
Markdown (Informal)
[A Few Topical Tweets are Enough for Effective User Stance Detection](https://preview.aclanthology.org/fix-sig-urls/2021.eacl-main.227/) (Samih & Darwish, EACL 2021)
ACL