Ho-Jin Choi


2021

pdf bib
Constructing Multi-Modal Dialogue Dataset by Replacing Text with Semantically Relevant Images
Nyoungwoo Lee | Suwon Shin | Jaegul Choo | Ho-Jin Choi | Sung-Hyon Myaeng
Proceedings of the 59th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics and the 11th International Joint Conference on Natural Language Processing (Volume 2: Short Papers)

In multi-modal dialogue systems, it is important to allow the use of images as part of a multi-turn conversation. Training such dialogue systems generally requires a large-scale dataset consisting of multi-turn dialogues that involve images, but such datasets rarely exist. In response, this paper proposes a 45k multi-modal dialogue dataset created with minimal human intervention. Our method to create such a dataset consists of (1) preparing and pre-processing text dialogue datasets, (2) creating image-mixed dialogues by using a text-to-image replacement technique, and (3) employing a contextual-similarity-based filtering step to ensure the contextual coherence of the dataset. To evaluate the validity of our dataset, we devise a simple retrieval model for dialogue sentence prediction tasks. Automatic metrics and human evaluation results on such tasks show that our dataset can be effectively used as training data for multi-modal dialogue systems which require an understanding of images and text in a context-aware manner. Our dataset and generation code is available at https://github.com/shh1574/multi-modal-dialogue-dataset.

2020

pdf bib
Korean-Specific Emotion Annotation Procedure Using N-Gram-Based Distant Supervision and Korean-Specific-Feature-Based Distant Supervision
Young-Jun Lee | Chae-Gyun Lim | Ho-Jin Choi
Proceedings of the 12th Language Resources and Evaluation Conference

Detecting emotions from texts is considerably important in an NLP task, but it has the limitation of the scarcity of manually labeled data. To overcome this limitation, many researchers have annotated unlabeled data with certain frequently used annotation procedures. However, most of these studies are focused mainly on English and do not consider the characteristics of the Korean language. In this paper, we present a Korean-specific annotation procedure, which consists of two parts, namely n-gram-based distant supervision and Korean-specific-feature-based distant supervision. We leverage the distant supervision with the n-gram and Korean emotion lexicons. Then, we consider the Korean-specific emotion features. Through experiments, we showed the effectiveness of our procedure by comparing with the KTEA dataset. Additionally, we constructed a large-scale emotion-labeled dataset, Korean Movie Review Emotion (KMRE) Dataset, using our procedure. In order to construct our dataset, we used a large-scale sentiment movie review corpus as the unlabeled dataset. Moreover, we used a Korean emotion lexicon provided by KTEA. We also performed an emotion classification task and a human evaluation on the KMRE dataset.

2018

pdf bib
Korean TimeBank Including Relative Temporal Information
Chae-Gyun Lim | Young-Seob Jeong | Ho-Jin Choi
Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC 2018)

2016

pdf bib
Korean TimeML and Korean TimeBank
Young-Seob Jeong | Won-Tae Joo | Hyun-Woo Do | Chae-Gyun Lim | Key-Sun Choi | Ho-Jin Choi
Proceedings of the Tenth International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC'16)

Many emerging documents usually contain temporal information. Because the temporal information is useful for various applications, it became important to develop a system of extracting the temporal information from the documents. Before developing the system, it first necessary to define or design the structure of temporal information. In other words, it is necessary to design a language which defines how to annotate the temporal information. There have been some studies about the annotation languages, but most of them was applicable to only a specific target language (e.g., English). Thus, it is necessary to design an individual annotation language for each language. In this paper, we propose a revised version of Koreain Time Mark-up Language (K-TimeML), and also introduce a dataset, named Korean TimeBank, that is constructed basd on the K-TimeML. We believe that the new K-TimeML and Korean TimeBank will be used in many further researches about extraction of temporal information.

2015

pdf bib
Temporal Information Extraction from Korean Texts
Young-Seob Jeong | Zae Myung Kim | Hyun-Woo Do | Chae-Gyun Lim | Ho-Jin Choi
Proceedings of the Nineteenth Conference on Computational Natural Language Learning

pdf bib
Korean Twitter Emotion Classification Using Automatically Built Emotion Lexicons and Fine-Grained Features
Hyo Jin Do | Ho-Jin Choi
Proceedings of the 29th Pacific Asia Conference on Language, Information and Computation: Posters

pdf bib
Measuring Popularity of Machine-Generated Sentences Using Term Count, Document Frequency, and Dependency Language Model
Jong Myoung Kim | Hancheol Park | Young-Seob Jeong | Ho-Jin Choi | Gahgene Gweon | Jeong Hur
Proceedings of the 29th Pacific Asia Conference on Language, Information and Computation: Posters

2014

pdf bib
Sentential Paraphrase Generation for Agglutinative Languages Using SVM with a String Kernel
Hancheol Park | Gahgene Gweon | Ho-Jin Choi | Jeong Heo | Pum-Mo Ryu
Proceedings of the 28th Pacific Asia Conference on Language, Information and Computing