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PGCD: a position-guied contributive distribution unit for aspect based sentiment analysis

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 Added by Zijian Zhang
 Publication date 2021
and research's language is English




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Aspect based sentiment analysis (ABSA), exploring sentim- ent polarity of aspect-given sentence, has drawn widespread applications in social media and public opinion. Previously researches typically derive aspect-independent representation by sentence feature generation only depending on text data. In this paper, we propose a Position-Guided Contributive Distribution (PGCD) unit. It achieves a position-dependent contributive pattern and generates aspect-related statement feature for ABSA task. Quoted from Shapley Value, PGCD can gain position-guided contextual contribution and enhance the aspect-based representation. Furthermore, the unit can be used for improving effects on multimodal ABSA task, whose datasets restructured by ourselves. Extensive experiments on both text and text-audio level using dataset (SemEval) show that by applying the proposed unit, the mainstream models advance performance in accuracy and F1 score.

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Recent neural-based aspect-based sentiment analysis approaches, though achieving promising improvement on benchmark datasets, have reported suffering from poor robustness when encountering confounder such as non-target aspects. In this paper, we take a causal view to addressing this issue. We propose a simple yet effective method, namely, Sentiment Adjustment (SENTA), by applying a backdoor adjustment to disentangle those confounding factors. Experimental results on the Aspect Robustness Test Set (ARTS) dataset demonstrate that our approach improves the performance while maintaining accuracy in the original test set.
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Aspect based sentiment analysis, predicting sentiment polarity of given aspects, has drawn extensive attention. Previous attention-based models emphasize using aspect semantics to help extract opinion features for classification. However, these works are either not able to capture opinion spans as a whole, or not able to capture variable-length opinion spans. In this paper, we present a neat and effective structured attention model by aggregating multiple linear-chain CRFs. Such a design allows the model to extract aspect-specific opinion spans and then evaluate sentiment polarity by exploiting the extracted opinion features. The experimental results on four datasets demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed model, and our analysis demonstrates that our model can capture aspect-specific opinion spans.
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