Political-LLM: Large Language Models in Political Science
December 09, 2024 ยท Declared Dead ยท ๐ arXiv.org
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Authors
Lincan Li, Jiaqi Li, Catherine Chen, Fred Gui, Hongjia Yang, Chenxiao Yu, Zhengguang Wang, Jianing Cai, Junlong Aaron Zhou, Bolin Shen, Alex Qian, Weixin Chen, Zhongkai Xue, Lichao Sun, Lifang He, Hanjie Chen, Kaize Ding, Zijian Du, Fangzhou Mu, Jiaxin Pei, Jieyu Zhao, Swabha Swayamdipta, Willie Neiswanger, Hua Wei, Xiyang Hu, Shixiang Zhu, Tianlong Chen, Yingzhou Lu, Yang Shi, Lianhui Qin, Tianfan Fu, Zhengzhong Tu, Yuzhe Yang, Jaemin Yoo, Jiaheng Zhang, Ryan Rossi, Liang Zhan, Liang Zhao, Emilio Ferrara, Yan Liu, Furong Huang, Xiangliang Zhang, Lawrence Rothenberg, Shuiwang Ji, Philip S. Yu, Yue Zhao, Yushun Dong
arXiv ID
2412.06864
Category
cs.CL: Computation & Language
Cross-listed
cs.AI
Citations
27
Venue
arXiv.org
Last Checked
4 months ago
Abstract
In recent years, large language models (LLMs) have been widely adopted in political science tasks such as election prediction, sentiment analysis, policy impact assessment, and misinformation detection. Meanwhile, the need to systematically understand how LLMs can further revolutionize the field also becomes urgent. In this work, we--a multidisciplinary team of researchers spanning computer science and political science--present the first principled framework termed Political-LLM to advance the comprehensive understanding of integrating LLMs into computational political science. Specifically, we first introduce a fundamental taxonomy classifying the existing explorations into two perspectives: political science and computational methodologies. In particular, from the political science perspective, we highlight the role of LLMs in automating predictive and generative tasks, simulating behavior dynamics, and improving causal inference through tools like counterfactual generation; from a computational perspective, we introduce advancements in data preparation, fine-tuning, and evaluation methods for LLMs that are tailored to political contexts. We identify key challenges and future directions, emphasizing the development of domain-specific datasets, addressing issues of bias and fairness, incorporating human expertise, and redefining evaluation criteria to align with the unique requirements of computational political science. Political-LLM seeks to serve as a guidebook for researchers to foster an informed, ethical, and impactful use of Artificial Intelligence in political science. Our online resource is available at: http://political-llm.org/.
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