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      Challenges in Discriminating Profanity from Hate Speech

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          Abstract

          In this study we approach the problem of distinguishing general profanity from hate speech in social media, something which has not been widely considered. Using a new dataset annotated specifically for this task, we employ supervised classification along with a set of features that includes n-grams, skip-grams and clustering-based word representations. We apply approaches based on single classifiers as well as more advanced ensemble classifiers and stacked generalization, achieving the best result of 80% accuracy for this 3-class classification task. Analysis of the results reveals that discriminating hate speech and profanity is not a simple task, which may require features that capture a deeper understanding of the text not always possible with surface n-grams. The variability of gold labels in the annotated data, due to differences in the subjective adjudications of the annotators, is also an issue. Other directions for future work are discussed.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          14 March 2018
          Article
          1803.05495
          d395fba3-55a9-4529-8564-c15385a87576

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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          Shervin Malmasi, Marcos Zampieri (2018) Challenges in Discriminating Profanity from Hate Speech. Journal of Experimental & Theoretical Artificial Intelligence. Volume 30, Issue 2, pp. 187-202. Taylor & Francis
          cs.CL

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