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RavindranV
Fixing paper assignments
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This paper presents a system for counter-speech generation, developed for the COLING 2025 shared task. By leveraging lightweight transformer models, DistilBART and T5-small, we optimize computational efficiency while maintaining strong performance. The work includes an in-depth analysis of a multilingual dataset, addressing hate speech instances across diverse languages and target groups. Through systematic error analysis, we identify challenges such as lack of specificity and context misinterpretation in generated counter-narratives. Evaluation metrics like BLEU, ROUGE, and BERTScore demonstrate the effectiveness of our approaches, while comparative insights highlight complementary strengths in fluency, contextual integration, and creativity. Future directions focus on enhancing preprocessing, integrating external knowledge sources, and improving scalability.
Our study explores multi-label emotion classification using fine-tuned BERT models, achieving superior performance over traditional methods such as logistic regression. The intricate nature of overlapping emotional expressions in text necessitates a robust classification framework. Fine-tuning BERT with weighted binary cross-entropy loss enhances predictive accuracy, particularly for underrepresented emotions like anger and joy. Moreover, threshold optimization plays a pivotal role in refining decision boundaries, boosting recall, and increasing the macro F1-score. Comparative analysis against RoBERTa and XGBoost further underscores the effectiveness of contextual embeddings in capturing subtle emotional nuances. Despite these improvements, challenges such as class imbalance and inter-class confusion persist, highlighting the need for future advancements in ensemble learning, contrastive pretraining, and domain-adaptive fine-tuning.
Emotion Recognition in Conversation (ERC) in the context of code-mixed Hindi-English interactions is a subtask addressed in SemEval-2024 as Task 10. We made our maiden attempt to solve the problem using natural language processing, machine learning and deep learning techniques, that perform well in properly assigning emotions to individual utterances from a predefined collection. The use of well-proven classifier such as Long Short Term Memory networks improve the model’s efficacy than the BERT and Glove based models. How-ever, difficulties develop in the subtle arena of emotion-flip reasoning in multi-party discussions, emphasizing the importance of specialized methodologies. Our findings shed light on the intricacies of emotion dynamics in code-mixed languages, pointing to potential areas for further research and refinement in multilingual understanding.
This paper presents our approach to SemEval- 2024 Task 1: Semantic Textual Relatedness (STR). Out of the 14 languages provided, we specifically focused on English and Telugu. Our proposal employs advanced natural language processing techniques and leverages the Sentence Transformers library for sentence embeddings. For English, a Gradient Boosting Regressor trained on DistilBERT embeddingsachieves competitive results, while for Telugu, a multilingual model coupled with hyperparameter tuning yields enhanced performance. The paper discusses the significance of semantic relatedness in various languages, highlighting the challenges and nuances encountered. Our findings contribute to the understanding of semantic textual relatedness across diverse linguistic landscapes, providing valuable insights for future research in multilingual natural language processing.