@inproceedings{shashirekha-etal-2026-sjm,
title = "{SJM}{\_}{MINDS}@{D}ravidian{L}ang{T}ech@{ACL}2026: Machine Learning Approaches for Hope Speech Detection in Code-Mixed {T}ulu",
author = "Shashirekha, Hosahalli Lakshmaiah and
Manjula and
Krishna, Jayashree",
editor = "Chakravarthi, Bharathi Raja and
Priyadharshini, Ruba and
Madasamy, Anand Kumar and
Thavareesan, Sajeetha and
Rajiakodi, Saranya and
Navaneethakrishnan, Subalalitha and
Chinnappa, Dhivya and
Palani, Balasubramanian and
Subramanian, Malliga and
Shanmugavadivel, Kogilavani and
Rajalakshmi, Ratnavel",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the Sixth Workshop on Speech, Vision, and Language Technologies for {D}ravidian Languages",
month = jul,
year = "2026",
address = "Underline (Virtual)",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://aclanthology.org/2026.dravidianlangtech-1.56/",
pages = "359--365",
ISBN = "979-8-89176-401-9",
abstract = "Hope speech detection is an important task in understanding emotionally constructive communication in online platforms, especially in low-resource and code-mixed languages. This paper describes our system submitted to the first shared task on Hope Speech Detection in Code-Mixed Tulu, organized by DravidianLangTech@ACL 2026. The shared task consists of two tasks: Task 1 - Coarse-Grained Hope Tone Classification and Task 2 - Fine-Grained Hope Type Classification, with the objective of detecting and classifying the tone and type of hope expressed in code-mixed Tulu texts. We experimented with Logistic Regression (LR) and Linear Support Vector Classifier (LinearSVC) - classical Machine Learning (ML) approaches, trained with Term Frequency and Inverse Document Frequency (TF-IDF) of word ngrams (n = 1, 2). For Task 1, we employed both models, whereas for Task 2, we employed only the LR model. Linear SVC obtained a macro F1-score of 0.51 in Task 1 and secured 4th rank, while the LR model obtained a macro F1-score of 0.37 in Task 2 and secured 5th rank. The results demonstrate that traditional ML approaches remain effective for low-resource code-mixed language scenarios."
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<abstract>Hope speech detection is an important task in understanding emotionally constructive communication in online platforms, especially in low-resource and code-mixed languages. This paper describes our system submitted to the first shared task on Hope Speech Detection in Code-Mixed Tulu, organized by DravidianLangTech@ACL 2026. The shared task consists of two tasks: Task 1 - Coarse-Grained Hope Tone Classification and Task 2 - Fine-Grained Hope Type Classification, with the objective of detecting and classifying the tone and type of hope expressed in code-mixed Tulu texts. We experimented with Logistic Regression (LR) and Linear Support Vector Classifier (LinearSVC) - classical Machine Learning (ML) approaches, trained with Term Frequency and Inverse Document Frequency (TF-IDF) of word ngrams (n = 1, 2). For Task 1, we employed both models, whereas for Task 2, we employed only the LR model. Linear SVC obtained a macro F1-score of 0.51 in Task 1 and secured 4th rank, while the LR model obtained a macro F1-score of 0.37 in Task 2 and secured 5th rank. The results demonstrate that traditional ML approaches remain effective for low-resource code-mixed language scenarios.</abstract>
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%0 Conference Proceedings
%T SJM_MINDS@DravidianLangTech@ACL2026: Machine Learning Approaches for Hope Speech Detection in Code-Mixed Tulu
%A Shashirekha, Hosahalli Lakshmaiah
%A Krishna, Jayashree
%Y Chakravarthi, Bharathi Raja
%Y Priyadharshini, Ruba
%Y Madasamy, Anand Kumar
%Y Thavareesan, Sajeetha
%Y Rajiakodi, Saranya
%Y Navaneethakrishnan, Subalalitha
%Y Chinnappa, Dhivya
%Y Palani, Balasubramanian
%Y Subramanian, Malliga
%Y Shanmugavadivel, Kogilavani
%Y Rajalakshmi, Ratnavel
%A Manjula
%S Proceedings of the Sixth Workshop on Speech, Vision, and Language Technologies for Dravidian Languages
%D 2026
%8 July
%I Association for Computational Linguistics
%C Underline (Virtual)
%@ 979-8-89176-401-9
%F shashirekha-etal-2026-sjm
%X Hope speech detection is an important task in understanding emotionally constructive communication in online platforms, especially in low-resource and code-mixed languages. This paper describes our system submitted to the first shared task on Hope Speech Detection in Code-Mixed Tulu, organized by DravidianLangTech@ACL 2026. The shared task consists of two tasks: Task 1 - Coarse-Grained Hope Tone Classification and Task 2 - Fine-Grained Hope Type Classification, with the objective of detecting and classifying the tone and type of hope expressed in code-mixed Tulu texts. We experimented with Logistic Regression (LR) and Linear Support Vector Classifier (LinearSVC) - classical Machine Learning (ML) approaches, trained with Term Frequency and Inverse Document Frequency (TF-IDF) of word ngrams (n = 1, 2). For Task 1, we employed both models, whereas for Task 2, we employed only the LR model. Linear SVC obtained a macro F1-score of 0.51 in Task 1 and secured 4th rank, while the LR model obtained a macro F1-score of 0.37 in Task 2 and secured 5th rank. The results demonstrate that traditional ML approaches remain effective for low-resource code-mixed language scenarios.
%U https://aclanthology.org/2026.dravidianlangtech-1.56/
%P 359-365
Markdown (Informal)
[SJM_MINDS@DravidianLangTech@ACL2026: Machine Learning Approaches for Hope Speech Detection in Code-Mixed Tulu](https://aclanthology.org/2026.dravidianlangtech-1.56/) (Shashirekha et al., DravidianLangTech 2026)
ACL