Publication | Open Access
Get out the vote: Determining support or opposition from Congressional floor-debate transcripts
166
Citations
29
References
2006
Year
Argumentation AnalysisPolitical ProcessPublic OpinionCongressional Floor-debate TranscriptsPolitical BehaviorRhetoricCommunicationCorpus LinguisticsU.s. Congressional FloorSocial SciencesApplied LinguisticsComputational LinguisticsPolitical SciencePolitical CommunicationDiscourse AnalysisConversation AnalysisLanguage StudiesArgument MiningPublic PolicyDialogue ManagementDiscourse SegmentsSpeech CommunicationDiscourse StructurePolitical AgendaLinguisticsPublic Debate
We investigate whether one can determine from the transcripts of U.S. Congressional floor debates whether the speeches represent support of or opposition to proposed legislation. To address this problem, we exploit the fact that these speeches occur as part of a discussion; this allows us to use sources of information regarding relationships between discourse segments, such as whether a given utterance indicates agreement with the opinion expressed by another. We find that the incorporation of such information yields substantial improvements over classifying speeches in isolation.
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