Predicting In-Game Actions from Interviews of NBA Players

Nadav Oved, Amir Feder, Roi Reichart


Abstract
Sports competitions are widely researched in computer and social science, with the goal of understanding how players act under uncertainty. Although there is an abundance of computational work on player metrics prediction based on past performance, very few attempts to incorporate out-of-game signals have been made. Specifically, it was previously unclear whether linguistic signals gathered from players’ interviews can add information that does not appear in performance metrics. To bridge that gap, we define text classification tasks of predicting deviations from mean in NBA players’ in-game actions, which are associated with strategic choices, player behavior, and risk, using their choice of language prior to the game. We collected a data set of transcripts from key NBA players’ pre-game interviews and their in-game performance metrics, totalling 5,226 interview-metric pairs. We design neural models for players’ action prediction based on increasingly more complex aspects of the language signals in their open-ended interviews. Our models can make their predictions based on the textual signal alone, or on a combination of that signal with signals from past-performance metrics. Our text-based models outperform strong baselines trained on performance metrics only, demonstrating the importance of language usage for action prediction. Moreover, the models that utilize both textual input and past-performance metrics produced the best results. Finally, as neural networks are notoriously difficult to interpret, we propose a method for gaining further insight into what our models have learned. Particularly, we present a latent Dirichlet allocation–based analysis, where we interpret model predictions in terms of correlated topics. We find that our best performing textual model is most associated with topics that are intuitively related to each prediction task and that better models yield higher correlation with more informative topics.1
Anthology ID:
2020.cl-3.4
Volume:
Computational Linguistics, Volume 46, Issue 3 - September 2020
Month:
September
Year:
2020
Address:
Venue:
CL
SIG:
Publisher:
Note:
Pages:
667–712
Language:
URL:
https://aclanthology.org/2020.cl-3.4
DOI:
10.1162/coli_a_00383
Bibkey:
Cite (ACL):
Nadav Oved, Amir Feder, and Roi Reichart. 2020. Predicting In-Game Actions from Interviews of NBA Players. Computational Linguistics, 46(3):667–712.
Cite (Informal):
Predicting In-Game Actions from Interviews of NBA Players (Oved et al., CL 2020)
Copy Citation:
PDF:
https://aclanthology.org/2020.cl-3.4.pdf
Code
 nadavo/mood +  additional community code
Data
BookCorpus