Citation

Identifying Collocations for Recognizing Opinions

Author:
Wiebe, Janyce; Wilson, Theresa; Bell, Matthew
Publication:
Proceedings of the ACL-01 Workshop on Collocation: Computational Extraction, Analysis, and Exploitation
Year:
2001

Subjectivity in natural language refers to aspects of language used to express opinions and evaluations (Banfield, 1982; Wiebe, 1994). There are numerous applications for which knowledge of subjectivity is relevant, including genre detection, information extraction, and information retrieval. This paper shows promising results for a straightforward method of identifying collocational clues of subjectivity, as well as evidence of the usefulness of these clues for recognizing opinionated documents.