Publication | Closed Access
Reproducing affective norms with lexical co-occurrence statistics: Predicting valence, arousal, and dominance
82
Citations
60
References
2014
Year
Affective VariableAffective NeurosciencePsycholinguisticsMultimodal Sentiment AnalysisHuman RatersCorpus LinguisticsPsychologySocial SciencesText MiningEmotional ResponseApplied LinguisticsNatural Language ProcessingAffective ComputingHuman RatingsLanguage StudiesLexiconCognitive ScienceDistributional SemanticsSocial CognitionLexical Co-occurrence StatisticsEmotionLinguisticsEmotion RecognitionBootstrapped RatingsAffective Norms
Human ratings of valence, arousal, and dominance are frequently used to study the cognitive mechanisms of emotional attention, word recognition, and numerous other phenomena in which emotions are hypothesized to play an important role. Collecting such norms from human raters is expensive and time consuming. As a result, affective norms are available for only a small number of English words, are not available for proper nouns in English, and are sparse in other languages. This paper investigated whether affective ratings can be predicted from length, contextual diversity, co-occurrences with words of known valence, and orthographic similarity to words of known valence, providing an algorithm for estimating affective ratings for larger and different datasets. Our bootstrapped ratings achieved correlations with human ratings on valence, arousal, and dominance that are on par with previously reported correlations across gender, age, education and language boundaries. We release these bootstrapped norms for 23,495 English words.
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