Steffen Herbold
2024
Question Type Prediction in Natural Debate
Zlata Kikteva
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Alexander Trautsch
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Steffen Herbold
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Annette Hautli-Janisz
Proceedings of the 25th Annual Meeting of the Special Interest Group on Discourse and Dialogue
In spontaneous natural debate, questions play a variety of crucial roles: they allow speakers to introduce new topics, seek other speakers’ opinions or indeed confront them. A three-class question typology has previously been demonstrated to effectively capture details pertaining to the nature of questions and the different functions associated with them in a debate setting. We adopt this classification and investigate the performance of several machine learning approaches on this task by incorporating various sets of lexical, dialogical and argumentative features. We find that BERT demonstrates the best performance on the task, followed by a Random Forest model enriched with pragmatic features.
2023
On the Impact of Reconstruction and Context for Argument Prediction in Natural Debate
Zlata Kikteva
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Alexander Trautsch
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Patrick Katzer
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Mirko Oest
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Steffen Herbold
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Annette Hautli-Janisz
Proceedings of the 10th Workshop on Argument Mining
Debate naturalness ranges on a scale from small, highly structured, and topically focused settings to larger, more spontaneous and less constrained environments. The more unconstrained a debate, the more spontaneous speakers act: they build on contextual knowledge and use anaphora or ellipses to construct their arguments. They also use rhetorical devices such as questions and imperatives to support or attack claims. In this paper, we study how the reconstruction of the actual debate contributions, i.e., utterances which contain pronouns, ellipses and fuzzy language, into full-fledged propositions which are interpretable without context impacts the prediction of argument relations and investigate the effect of incorporating contextual information for the task. We work with highly complex spontaneous debates with more than 10 speakers on a wide variety of topics. We find that in contrast to our initial hypothesis, reconstruction does not improve predictions and context only improves them when used in combination with propositions.
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