Yael R. Kaplan


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2025

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HebID: Detecting Social Identities in Hebrew-language Political Text
Guy Mor-Lan | Naama Rivlin-Angert | Yael R. Kaplan | Tamir Sheafer | Shaul R. Shenhav
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: EMNLP 2025

Political language is deeply intertwined with social identities. While social identities are often shaped by specific cultural contexts, existing NLP datasets are predominantly English-centric and focus on coarse-grained identity categories. We introduce HebID, the first multilabel Hebrew corpus for social identity detection. The corpus contains 5,536 sentences from Israeli politicians’ Facebook posts (Dec 2018-Apr 2021), with each sentence manually annotated for twelve nuanced social identities (e.g., Rightist, Ultra-Orthodox, Socially-oriented) selected based on their salience in national survey data. We benchmark multilabel and single-label encoders alongside 2B-9B-parameter decoder LLMs, finding that Hebrew-tuned LLMs provide the best results (macro-F1 = 0.74). We apply our classifier to politicians’ Facebook posts and parliamentary speeches, evaluating differences in popularity, temporal trends, clustering patterns, and gender-related variations in identity expression. We utilize identity choices from a national public survey, comparing the identities portrayed in elite discourse with those prioritized by the public. HebID provides a comprehensive foundation for studying social identities in Hebrew and can serve as a model for similar research in other non-English political contexts