The Copenhagen team participation in the factuality task of the competition of automatic identification and verification of claims in political debates of the CLEF-2018 Fact Checking Lab

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingArticle in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Standard

The Copenhagen team participation in the factuality task of the competition of automatic identification and verification of claims in political debates of the CLEF-2018 Fact Checking Lab. / Wang, Dongsheng; Simonsen, Jakob Grue; Larsen, Birger; Lioma, Christina.

CLEF 2018 Working Notes. ed. / Linda Cappellato ; Nicola Ferro ; Jian-Yun Nie; Laure Soulier. 10. ed. CEUR-WS.org, 2018. 98 (CEUR Workshop Proceedings, Vol. 2125).

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingArticle in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Wang, D, Simonsen, JG, Larsen, B & Lioma, C 2018, The Copenhagen team participation in the factuality task of the competition of automatic identification and verification of claims in political debates of the CLEF-2018 Fact Checking Lab. in L Cappellato , N Ferro , J-Y Nie & L Soulier (eds), CLEF 2018 Working Notes. 10 edn, 98, CEUR-WS.org, CEUR Workshop Proceedings, vol. 2125, 19th Working Notes of CLEF Conference and Labs of the Evaluation Forum, CLEF 2018, Avignon, France, 10/09/2018.

APA

Wang, D., Simonsen, J. G., Larsen, B., & Lioma, C. (2018). The Copenhagen team participation in the factuality task of the competition of automatic identification and verification of claims in political debates of the CLEF-2018 Fact Checking Lab. In L. Cappellato , N. Ferro , J-Y. Nie, & L. Soulier (Eds.), CLEF 2018 Working Notes (10 ed.). [98] CEUR-WS.org. CEUR Workshop Proceedings Vol. 2125

Vancouver

Wang D, Simonsen JG, Larsen B, Lioma C. The Copenhagen team participation in the factuality task of the competition of automatic identification and verification of claims in political debates of the CLEF-2018 Fact Checking Lab. In Cappellato L, Ferro N, Nie J-Y, Soulier L, editors, CLEF 2018 Working Notes. 10 ed. CEUR-WS.org. 2018. 98. (CEUR Workshop Proceedings, Vol. 2125).

Author

Wang, Dongsheng ; Simonsen, Jakob Grue ; Larsen, Birger ; Lioma, Christina. / The Copenhagen team participation in the factuality task of the competition of automatic identification and verification of claims in political debates of the CLEF-2018 Fact Checking Lab. CLEF 2018 Working Notes. editor / Linda Cappellato ; Nicola Ferro ; Jian-Yun Nie ; Laure Soulier. 10. ed. CEUR-WS.org, 2018. (CEUR Workshop Proceedings, Vol. 2125).

Bibtex

@inproceedings{bed59021cac0422aac254904dc8331f6,
title = "The Copenhagen team participation in the factuality task of the competition of automatic identification and verification of claims in political debates of the CLEF-2018 Fact Checking Lab",
abstract = "Given a set of political debate claims that have been already identified as worth checking, we consider the task of automatically checking the factuality of these claims. In particular, given a sentence that is worth checking, the goal is for the system to determine whether the claim is likely to be true, false, half-true or that it is unsure of its factuality. We implement a variety of models, including Bayes, SVM, RNN, to either step-wise assist our model or work as potential baselines. Then, we develop additional multi-scale Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) with different kernel sizes that learn from external sources whether a claim is true, false, half-true or unsure as follows: we treat claims as search engine queries and step-wise retrieve the top-N documents from Google with as much original claim as possible. We strategically select most relevant but sufficient documents with respect to the claims, and extract features, such as title, total number of results returned, and snippet to train the prediction model. We submitted results of SVM and CNNs, and the overall performance of our techniques is successful, achieving the overall best performing run (with lowest error rate 0.7050 from our SVM and highest accuracy 46.76% from our CNNs) in the competition.",
keywords = "CNN, Fact checking, Political debates, RNN",
author = "Dongsheng Wang and Simonsen, {Jakob Grue} and Birger Larsen and Christina Lioma",
year = "2018",
language = "English",
series = "CEUR Workshop Proceedings",
publisher = "CEUR-WS.org",
editor = "{Cappellato }, Linda and {Ferro }, Nicola and Nie, {Jian-Yun } and Laure Soulier",
booktitle = "CLEF 2018 Working Notes",
edition = "10",
note = "19th Working Notes of CLEF Conference and Labs of the Evaluation Forum, CLEF 2018 ; Conference date: 10-09-2018 Through 14-09-2018",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - The Copenhagen team participation in the factuality task of the competition of automatic identification and verification of claims in political debates of the CLEF-2018 Fact Checking Lab

AU - Wang, Dongsheng

AU - Simonsen, Jakob Grue

AU - Larsen, Birger

AU - Lioma, Christina

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Given a set of political debate claims that have been already identified as worth checking, we consider the task of automatically checking the factuality of these claims. In particular, given a sentence that is worth checking, the goal is for the system to determine whether the claim is likely to be true, false, half-true or that it is unsure of its factuality. We implement a variety of models, including Bayes, SVM, RNN, to either step-wise assist our model or work as potential baselines. Then, we develop additional multi-scale Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) with different kernel sizes that learn from external sources whether a claim is true, false, half-true or unsure as follows: we treat claims as search engine queries and step-wise retrieve the top-N documents from Google with as much original claim as possible. We strategically select most relevant but sufficient documents with respect to the claims, and extract features, such as title, total number of results returned, and snippet to train the prediction model. We submitted results of SVM and CNNs, and the overall performance of our techniques is successful, achieving the overall best performing run (with lowest error rate 0.7050 from our SVM and highest accuracy 46.76% from our CNNs) in the competition.

AB - Given a set of political debate claims that have been already identified as worth checking, we consider the task of automatically checking the factuality of these claims. In particular, given a sentence that is worth checking, the goal is for the system to determine whether the claim is likely to be true, false, half-true or that it is unsure of its factuality. We implement a variety of models, including Bayes, SVM, RNN, to either step-wise assist our model or work as potential baselines. Then, we develop additional multi-scale Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) with different kernel sizes that learn from external sources whether a claim is true, false, half-true or unsure as follows: we treat claims as search engine queries and step-wise retrieve the top-N documents from Google with as much original claim as possible. We strategically select most relevant but sufficient documents with respect to the claims, and extract features, such as title, total number of results returned, and snippet to train the prediction model. We submitted results of SVM and CNNs, and the overall performance of our techniques is successful, achieving the overall best performing run (with lowest error rate 0.7050 from our SVM and highest accuracy 46.76% from our CNNs) in the competition.

KW - CNN

KW - Fact checking

KW - Political debates

KW - RNN

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85051059348&partnerID=8YFLogxK

M3 - Article in proceedings

AN - SCOPUS:85051059348

T3 - CEUR Workshop Proceedings

BT - CLEF 2018 Working Notes

A2 - Cappellato , Linda

A2 - Ferro , Nicola

A2 - Nie, Jian-Yun

A2 - Soulier, Laure

PB - CEUR-WS.org

T2 - 19th Working Notes of CLEF Conference and Labs of the Evaluation Forum, CLEF 2018

Y2 - 10 September 2018 through 14 September 2018

ER -

ID: 202539509