Abusive Language Detection in Online Conversations by Combining Content-and Graph-based Features

May 20, 2019 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› Frontiers in Big Data

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Authors Noé Cecillon, Vincent Labatut, Richard Dufour, Georges Linarès arXiv ID 1905.07894 Category cs.IR: Information Retrieval Cross-listed cs.CL, cs.SI Citations 23 Venue Frontiers in Big Data Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
In recent years, online social networks have allowed worldwide users to meet and discuss. As guarantors of these communities, the administrators of these platforms must prevent users from adopting inappropriate behaviors. This verification task, mainly done by humans, is more and more difficult due to the ever growing amount of messages to check. Methods have been proposed to automatize this moderation process, mainly by providing approaches based on the textual content of the exchanged messages. Recent work has also shown that characteristics derived from the structure of conversations, in the form of conversational graphs, can help detecting these abusive messages. In this paper, we propose to take advantage of both sources of information by proposing fusion methods integrating content-and graph-based features. Our experiments on raw chat logs show that the content of the messages, but also of their dynamics within a conversation contain partially complementary information, allowing performance improvements on an abusive message classification task with a final F-measure of 93.26%.
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