5 CONCLUSIONS
We are studying debates formed by the
conglomeration of an Internet news article and its
comments with the further aim of their automatic
analysis. A source text introduces some opinion and
the following comments either support or reject this
opinion. Departing from Conversation Analysis, the
source text can be considered as the first pair part
and its comment as the second pair part of an
adjacency pair (of dialogue acts). A comment (as an
opinion) can also initialize a new AP if one of the
next comments reacts to it (and therefore can be
considered as the second pair part of this AP). In
general, debate consists of micro-dialogues most of
which include one single AP. The commentators as
participants of debate belong to one of two
competing teams. One of them, ‘yes’-team, proposes
positive comments agreeing with the opinion
expressed in the source text, and another, ‘no’-team,
makes negative comments. The winners and losers
will be determined by ‘judges’ – the Internet users
who read the comments and give them the marks +1
or -1. The winner is the team with a bigger sum of
marks. Positive and negative comments in total give
an image (a portrait) of the main agent of the source
text. If positive comments overweigh then the
opinion expressed in the source text is approved by
the commentators and evaluators. Every comment
represents a point in communicative space which
can be characterized by a number of coordinates –
the features with the values +1, 0, or -1. These
values make it possible to introduce additional
classifications of comments (e.g. collaborative or
antagonistic, friendly or unfriendly, etc.). Evaluation
of the presented ideas, incl. automatic classification
of comments remains for the further work.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This work was supported by the Estonian Research
Council (grant IUT20-56).
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