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Multi-CoPED

Erick Skorupa Parolin, MohammadSaleh Hosseini, Yibo Hu, Latifur Khan, Patrick T. Brandt, Javier Osorio, Vito D’Orazio

202210 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Political and social scientists monitor, analyze and predict political unrest and violence, preventing (or mitigating) harm, and promoting the management of global conflict. They do so using event coder systems, which extract structured representations from news articles to design forecast models and event-driven continuous monitoring systems. Existing methods rely on expensive manual annotated dictionaries and do not support multilingual settings. To advance the global conflict management, we propose a novel model, Multi-CoPED (Multilingual Multi-Task Learning BERT for Coding Political Event Data), by exploiting multi-task learning and state-of-the-art language models for coding multilingual political events. This eliminates the need for expensive dictionaries by leveraging BERT models' contextual knowledge through transfer learning. The multilingual experiments demonstrate the superiority of Multi-CoPED over existing event coders, improving the absolute macro-averaged F1-scores by 23.3% and 30.7% for coding events in English and Spanish corpus, respectively. We believe that such expressive performance improvements can help to reduce harms to people at risk of violence.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceHarmTask (project management)MacroCoding (social sciences)Transfer of learningNatural language processingUnrestEvent (particle physics)PoliticsArtificial intelligencePsychologyPolitical scienceSocial psychologySociologyQuantum mechanicsPhysicsSocial scienceLawManagementEconomicsProgramming languageTopic ModelingComputational and Text Analysis MethodsNatural Language Processing Techniques
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