18 May 2010

Computer Algorithm Can Recognize Sarcasm (Which Is Just Soooo Cool)


Recognizing Sarcasm with Computer Algorithms

The pursuit of machine intelligence means we have to come up with ways to communicate with our computers in a way both entities can understand. But while computers process verbal commands in a straightforward fashion, humans tend to use more sophisticated speech forms, employing slang or symbols to convey an idea. So an Israeli research team has developed a machine algorithm that can recognize sarcasm.

SASI, a Semi-supervised Algorithm for Sarcasm Identification, can recognize sarcastic sentences in product reviews online with pretty astounding 77 percent precision. To create such an algorithm, the team scanned 66,000 Amazon.com product reviews, with three different human annotators tagging sentences for sarcasm. The team then identified certain sarcastic patterns that emerged in the reviews and created a classification algorithm that puts each statement into a sarcastic class.

(via PopSci)
 
-o-o-o-
 
Clever. But not as clever as the CleverBot. Seriously, when I first found this guy I spent like three days talking to it, 40% convinced that it's really just some grad student being an asshole (The CleverBot is seriously sarcastic, which I think says more about the users who chat with it than it does about the technology).
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Posted via email from technosocialite

No comments: