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Tanveer, Md Iftekhar
A Causality-Guided Prediction of the TED Talk Ratings from the Speech-Transcripts using Neural Networks
Tanveer, Md Iftekhar, Hasan, Md Kamrul, Gildea, Daniel, Hoque, M. Ehsan
Automated prediction of public speaking performance enables novel systems for tutoring public speaking skills. We use the largest open repository---TED Talks---to predict the ratings provided by the online viewers. The dataset contains over 2200 talk transcripts and the associated meta information including over 5.5 million ratings from spontaneous visitors to the website. We carefully removed the bias present in the dataset (e.g., the speakers' reputations, popularity gained by publicity, etc.) by modeling the data generating process using a causal diagram. We use a word sequence based recurrent architecture and a dependency tree based recursive architecture as the neural networks for predicting the TED talk ratings. Our neural network models can predict the ratings with an average F-score of 0.77 which largely outperforms the competitive baseline method.
UR-FUNNY: A Multimodal Language Dataset for Understanding Humor
Hasan, Md Kamrul, Rahman, Wasifur, Zadeh, Amir, Zhong, Jianyuan, Tanveer, Md Iftekhar, Morency, Louis-Philippe, Mohammed, null, Hoque, null
Humor is a unique and creative communicative behavior displayed during social interactions. It is produced in a multimodal manner, through the usage of words (text), gestures (vision) and prosodic cues (acoustic). Understanding humor from these three modalities falls within boundaries of multimodal language; a recent research trend in natural language processing that models natural language as it happens in face-to-face communication. Although humor detection is an established research area in NLP, in a multimodal context it is an understudied area. This paper presents a diverse multimodal dataset, called UR-FUNNY, to open the door to understanding multimodal language used in expressing humor. The dataset and accompanying studies, present a framework in multimodal humor detection for the natural language processing community. UR-FUNNY is publicly available for research.