@inproceedings{bassignana-etal-2020-matching,
title = "Matching Theory and Data with Personal-{ITY}: What a Corpus of {I}talian {Y}ou{T}ube Comments Reveals About Personality",
author = "Bassignana, Elisa and
Nissim, Malvina and
Patti, Viviana",
editor = "Nissim, Malvina and
Patti, Viviana and
Plank, Barbara and
Durmus, Esin",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Computational Modeling of People's Opinions, Personality, and Emotion's in Social Media",
month = dec,
year = "2020",
address = "Barcelona, Spain (Online)",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://aclanthology.org/2020.peoples-1.2",
pages = "11--22",
abstract = "As a contribution to personality detection in languages other than English, we rely on distant supervision to create Personal-ITY, a novel corpus of YouTube comments in Italian, where authors are labelled with personality traits. The traits are derived from one of the mainstream personality theories in psychology research, named MBTI. Using personality prediction experiments, we (i) study the task of personality prediction in itself on our corpus as well as on TWISTY, a Twitter dataset also annotated with MBTI labels; (ii) carry out an extensive, in-depth analysis of the features used by the classifier, and view them specifically under the light of the original theory that we used to create the corpus in the first place. We observe that no single model is best at personality detection, and that while some traits are easier than others to detect, and also to match back to theory, for other, less frequent traits the picture is much more blurred.",
}
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<abstract>As a contribution to personality detection in languages other than English, we rely on distant supervision to create Personal-ITY, a novel corpus of YouTube comments in Italian, where authors are labelled with personality traits. The traits are derived from one of the mainstream personality theories in psychology research, named MBTI. Using personality prediction experiments, we (i) study the task of personality prediction in itself on our corpus as well as on TWISTY, a Twitter dataset also annotated with MBTI labels; (ii) carry out an extensive, in-depth analysis of the features used by the classifier, and view them specifically under the light of the original theory that we used to create the corpus in the first place. We observe that no single model is best at personality detection, and that while some traits are easier than others to detect, and also to match back to theory, for other, less frequent traits the picture is much more blurred.</abstract>
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%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Matching Theory and Data with Personal-ITY: What a Corpus of Italian YouTube Comments Reveals About Personality
%A Bassignana, Elisa
%A Nissim, Malvina
%A Patti, Viviana
%Y Nissim, Malvina
%Y Patti, Viviana
%Y Plank, Barbara
%Y Durmus, Esin
%S Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Computational Modeling of People’s Opinions, Personality, and Emotion’s in Social Media
%D 2020
%8 December
%I Association for Computational Linguistics
%C Barcelona, Spain (Online)
%F bassignana-etal-2020-matching
%X As a contribution to personality detection in languages other than English, we rely on distant supervision to create Personal-ITY, a novel corpus of YouTube comments in Italian, where authors are labelled with personality traits. The traits are derived from one of the mainstream personality theories in psychology research, named MBTI. Using personality prediction experiments, we (i) study the task of personality prediction in itself on our corpus as well as on TWISTY, a Twitter dataset also annotated with MBTI labels; (ii) carry out an extensive, in-depth analysis of the features used by the classifier, and view them specifically under the light of the original theory that we used to create the corpus in the first place. We observe that no single model is best at personality detection, and that while some traits are easier than others to detect, and also to match back to theory, for other, less frequent traits the picture is much more blurred.
%U https://aclanthology.org/2020.peoples-1.2
%P 11-22
Markdown (Informal)
[Matching Theory and Data with Personal-ITY: What a Corpus of Italian YouTube Comments Reveals About Personality](https://aclanthology.org/2020.peoples-1.2) (Bassignana et al., PEOPLES 2020)
ACL