Figure 1 - uploaded by Alexander Osherenko
Content may be subject to copyright.
The example of a movie review The Wrestler movie review tells a story of a wrestler. It contains details about wrestler's physical and mental suffering expressed through words that have a negative emotional meaning. Maybe, the reviewer did not like the movie and wants to express his negative opinion? Nothing of the kind. The review is rated 3.5 out of 4 stars although it contains both positive laudatory words and negative devastating plot details.

The example of a movie review The Wrestler movie review tells a story of a wrestler. It contains details about wrestler's physical and mental suffering expressed through words that have a negative emotional meaning. Maybe, the reviewer did not like the movie and wants to express his negative opinion? Nothing of the kind. The review is rated 3.5 out of 4 stars although it contains both positive laudatory words and negative devastating plot details.

Source publication
Thesis
Full-text available
This dissertation investigates opinion mining and lexical affect sensing. It discusses emotional corpora and describes different approaches to affect categorization of their texts: a statistical approach that utilizes lexical, deictic, stylometric, and grammatical information; a semantic approach that relies on emotional dictionaries and on deep gr...

Similar publications

Article
Full-text available
Several research efforts tackled medical entity recognition from texts. However, to our knowledge, there are no comparative studies for the following approaches: (i) the extraction of noun phrases in an independent step before the final categorization step and (ii) identifying simultaneously entity boundaries and categories. In this paper, we focus...

Citations

... To react believably to tourists inputs, for example, to analyze ethical utterances, information processing can take into consideration NL processing [35:59]. Implementation of the NLP determinant is discussed in [36]. ...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
Modern cities struggle against urban problems, for instance, overcrowding which solution could be found through computer-aided simulation. This contribution describes simulation of scenarios in urban life and focuses on their ethical aspects. For this purpose, this article examines multidisciplinary determinants of ethical behavior of tourists and utilizes own framework for experimentation and rapid prototyping to create prototypes of urban simulation. This contribution ends up with a discussion and an outlook.
... ECAs that perform SI using Natural-Language (NL) utterances [43]. In our approach, we use NL approaches in [32] to analyze NL communication. [38,47]. ...
Chapter
Full-text available
https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319-97550-4_13 https://www.springerprofessional.de/en/implementing-social-smart-environments-with-a-large-number-of-be/16094652 This chapter discusses Social Smart Environments (SSEs) with a large number of believable Embodied Conversational Agents (ECAs) in the context of globalization. It focuses on SSE architecture, rapid prototyping and scalability with respect to size, geography, and administration. SSE is a software environment installed in a physical place representing, for example, a city inhabited by believable ECAs that interact comprehensibly with each other; believable ECAs are software agents that stand for humans from different cultures. To ensure believability, the ECAs maintain various determinants of processing, for instance, emotional, personal and cultural, identified through an analysis of 35 scenarios of intercultural interaction. This chapter shows implementation of these determinants and development of an SSE prototype on the basis of a specification defining interaction between ECAs. In conclusion, this contribution provides insight into future work addressing, for example, innovation in societies simulated by SSEs.
Book
Full-text available
Artificial Intelligence, Robots and Ethics contains the collection of selected papers presented at ICRES 2019- the fourth edition of International Conference series on Robot Ethics and Standards, London South Bank University, 29- 30 July 2019. ICRES 2019 brings new developments and new research findings in robot ethics and ethical issues of robotic and associated technologies. The topics covered include fundamentals and principles of robot ethics, social impact of robots, human factors, regulatory and safety issues. The ICRES 2019 conference includes a total of 19 articles, and four plenary lectures, from 8 countries. This number has been arrived at through rigorous peer review process submissions, where each paper initially submitted has received on average three reviews. The editors would like to thank members of the International Scientific Committee and National Organising Committee for their efforts in reviewing the submitted articles, and the authors in addressing the comments and suggestions of the reviewers in their final submissions.
Book
ICRES 2019 is the fourth edition of International Conference series on Robot Ethics and Standards. The conference is organized by CLAWAR Association in collaboration with the London South Bank University (LSBU) within the premises of LSBU, London, UK during 29 – 30 July 2019. ICRES 2019 brings new developments and new research findings inrobot ethics and ethical issues of robotic and associated technologies. The topics covered include fundamentals and principles of robot ethics, social impact of robots, human factors, regulatory and safety issues. The ICRES 2019 conference includes a total of 19 articles, and four plenary lectures, from 8 countries. This number has been arrived at through rigorous peer review process of initial submissions, where each paper initially submitted has received on average three reviews. The editors would like to thank members of the International Scientific Committee and National Organising Committee for their efforts in reviewing the submitted articles, and the authors in addressing the comments and suggestions of the reviewers in their final submissions. It is believed that the ICRES 2019 proceedings will be a valuable source of reference for research and development in the rapidly growing area of robotics and associated technologies. M. O. Tokhi, M. I. A. Ferreira, N. S. Govindarajulu, M. Silva, G. S. Virk, E. Kadar, and S. R. Fletcher