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Artificial intelligence programme that detects sarcasm in social media


A UCF team developed a technique that accurately detects sarcasm in a social media text.
Recognizing sarcasm in textual online communication is no easy task as none of these cues is readily available.
Washington: Properly understanding and responding to customer feedback on social media platforms is crucial for brands, and it may have just gotten a little easier thanks to new research by computer science researchers at the University of Central Florida who have developed a sarcasm detector.
Social media has become a dominant form of communication for individuals, and for companies looking to market and sell their products and services. ....

United States , Ramya Akula , Brian Kettler , Information Innovation Office , University Of Central Florida , Adaptive Systems Lab , Big Data Initiative , Central Florida , Assistant Professor , Ivan Garibay , Computational Simulation , Online Social Behavior , Complex Adaptive Systems Lab , Industrial Engineering , Artificial Intelligence , Social Media , Ool To Detect Social Media Sarcasm , Ow To Understand Social Media Sarcasm , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , பிரையன் கெட்லர் , தகவல் கண்டுபிடிப்பு அலுவலகம் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் மைய புளோரிடா , மாற்றி அமைக்கத்தக்க அமைப்புகள் ஆய்வகம் , பெரியது தகவல்கள் முயற்சி , மைய புளோரிடா , உதவியாளர் ப்ரொஃபெஸர் ,

Researchers develop artificial intelligence that can detect sarcasm in social media


Researchers develop artificial intelligence that can detect sarcasm in social media
ANI |
Updated: May 11, 2021 23:08 IST
Washington [US], May 11 (ANI): Properly understanding and responding to customer feedback on social media platforms is crucial for brands, and it may have just gotten a little easier thanks to new research by computer science researchers at the University of Central Florida who have developed a sarcasm detector.
Social media has become a dominant form of communication for individuals, and for companies looking to market and sell their products and services. Properly understanding and responding to customer feedback on Twitter, Facebook and other social media platforms are critical for success, but it is incredibly labour-intensive. ....

United States , Ramya Akula , Brian Kettler , Ivan Garibay , Information Innovation Office , Garibay Complex Adaptive Systems Lab , University Of Central Florida , Big Data Initiative , Central Florida , Assistant Professor , Computational Simulation , Online Social Behavior , Innovation Office , Complex Adaptive Systems Lab , Industrial Engineering , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , பிரையன் கெட்லர் , இவன் கரிபாய் , தகவல் கண்டுபிடிப்பு அலுவலகம் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் மைய புளோரிடா , பெரியது தகவல்கள் முயற்சி , மைய புளோரிடா , உதவியாளர் ப்ரொஃபெஸர் , கணக்கீட்டு உருவகப்படுத்துதல் , நிகழ்நிலை சமூக நடத்தை , கண்டுபிடிப்பு அலுவலகம் ,

Researchers develop artificial intelligence that can detect sarcasm in social media


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IMAGE: Dr. Garibay is investigating ways to make artificial intelligence smarter when it comes to detecting and appropriately responding to human emotions.
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Credit: University of Central Florida
Computer science researchers at the University of Central Florida have developed a sarcasm detector.
Social media has become a dominant form of communication for individuals, and for companies looking to market and sell their products and services. Properly understanding and responding to customer feedback on Twitter, Facebook and other social media platforms is critical for success, but it is incredibly labor intensive.
That s where sentiment analysis comes in. The term refers to the automated process of identifying the emotion either positive, negative or neutral associated with text. While artificial intelligence refers to logical data analysis and response, sentiment analysis is akin to correctly identifying emotional communicati ....

Ramya Akula , Brian Kettler , Ivan Garibay , Technical University Of Kaiserslautern , Garibay Complex Adaptive Systems Lab , University Of Central Florida , Big Data Initiative , Information Innovation Office , Jawaharlal Nehru Technological University , Central Florida , Assistant Professor , Computational Simulation , Online Social Behavior , Innovation Office , Complex Adaptive Systems Lab , Industrial Engineering , Technical University , பிரையன் கெட்லர் , இவன் கரிபாய் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் மைய புளோரிடா , பெரியது தகவல்கள் முயற்சி , தகவல் கண்டுபிடிப்பு அலுவலகம் , ஜவஹர்லால் நேரு தொழில்நுட்ப பல்கலைக்கழகம் , மைய புளோரிடா , உதவியாளர் ப்ரொஃபெஸர் , கணக்கீட்டு உருவகப்படுத்துதல் ,

AI calls for a new blame game


One of the greatest strengths of artificial intelligence (AI) – its ability to learn and adapt over time – could also be its Achilles’ heel.
When a product or service can learn and evolve through experience and interactions with human beings, it can be hard to pinpoint who is responsible when something goes wrong. How to allow for this dynamism and, at the same time, build trust in artificial intelligence was one of the key topics of debate in a Science|Business webinar entitled:
AI: Who is Liable? - the latest in a series produced by Science|Business Data Rules group.
“You see association effects where man and machine work together in a specific context, but it is unclear what the machine has learned from man, and what man has learned from the machine,’ noted Evert Stamhuis, senior fellow at the Jean Monnet Centre of Excellence Digital Governance, Erasmus University Rotterdam. ....

City Of , United Kingdom , Fred Popowich , Evert Stamhuis , Yiannos Tolias , Jack Qiu , Elizabeth Crossick , Christopher Hankin , Paul Nemitz , Erasmus University Rotterdam , European Parliament , Jean Monnet Centre Of Excellence Digital Governance , European Commission , Institute For Security Science , Association Of Computing Machinery , Imperial College London , National University Of Singapore , Simon Fraser University Big Data Initiative , Department Of Communications New Media , Business Data Rules , Jean Monnet Centre , Excellence Digital Governance , Erasmus University , East Asia , New Media , National University ,