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EmoBank

DOI

Overview

This repository contains EmoBank, a large-scale text corpus manually annotated with emotion according to the psychological Valence-Arousal-Dominance scheme. It was build at JULIE Lab, Jena University and is described in detail in our papers from EACL 2017 and LAW 2017 (see Citation). The repository contains two folders: "corpus" which contains the actual Emobank data (described in the EACL paper) and "pilot" which contains the data from our pilot study (described in the LAW paper). See the readme files in the respective folders for more detailed information regarding the data format.

News

  • May 2022. We added the individual, per-annotator ratings for the reader and the writer perspective. The data can be found in EmoBank/corpus/individual_reader_ratings.csv and EmoBank/corpus/individual_writer_ratings.csv, respectively. We also included a notebook (EmoBank/corpus/aggregation.ipynb) illustrating how the individual ratings were aggregated.
  • December 2019. We added a train-dev-test split to the dataset which can be found in EmoBank/corpus/emobank.csv. The data split is stratified with respect to text category (fiction, letters, newspaper,...). The code for creating the split can be found in EmoBank/corpus/adding_data_split.ipynb. We recommend using this split for model evaluation to increase comparability.

Characteristics

EmoBank comprises 10k sentences balancing multiple genres. It is special for having two kinds of double annotations: Each sentence was annotated according to both the emotion which is expressed by the writer, and the emotion which is perceived by the readers. Also, a subset of the corpus have been previously annotated according to Ekmans 6 Basic Emotions (Strapparava and Mihalcea, 2007) so that mappings between both representation formats become possible.

Attribution of Raw Data

The raw data of EmoBank is gathered from MASC, the manually annotated subcorpus of the ANC (Ide et al., 2010) and the SemEval 2007 Task 14 (Strapparava & Mihalcea, 2007). The raw data of the pilot studies is taken from MASC and the Standford Sentiment Treebank (Socher et al., 2013), originally collected by Pang and Lee (2005).

License

This work is licensed under CC-BY-SA 4.0: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/

Citation

Please cite the following papers if you use EmoBank:

  • Sven Buechel and Udo Hahn. 2017. EmoBank: Studying the Impact of Annotation Perspective and Representation Format on Dimensional Emotion Analysis. In EACL 2017 - Proceedings of the 15th Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics. Valencia, Spain, April 3-7, 2017. Volume 2, Short Papers, pages 578-585. Available: http://aclweb.org/anthology/E17-2092

  • Sven Buechel and Udo Hahn. 2017. Readers vs. writers vs. texts: Coping with different perspectives of text understanding in emotion annotation. In LAW 2017 - Proceedings of the 11th Linguistic Annotation Workshop @ EACL 2017. Valencia, Spain, April 3, 2017, pages 1-12. Available: https://sigann.github.io/LAW-XI-2017/papers/LAW01.pdf

Contact

I am happy answer questions and give additional information via email: [email protected]

References

  • Nancy C. Ide, Collin F. Baker, Christiane Fellbaum, and Rebecca J. Passonneau. 2010. The Manually Annotated Sub-Corpus: A community resource for and by the people. In ACL 2010 — Proceedings of the 48th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics. Uppsala, Sweden, 11-16 July 2010, volume 2: Short Papers, pages 68–73.
  • Bo Pang and Lillian Lee. 2005. Seeing stars: Exploiting class relationships for sentiment categorization with respect to rating scales. In ACL 2005 — Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics. AnnArbor, Michigan, USA, June 25–30, 2005, pages 115–124.
  • Richard Socher, Alex Perelygin, Jean Y. Wu, Jason Chuang, Christopher D. Manning, Andrew Y. Ng, and Christopher Potts. 2013. Recursive deep models for semantic compositionality over a sentiment treebank. In EMNLP 2013 — Proceedings of the 2013 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing. Seattle, Washington, USA, 18-21 October 2013, pages 1631–1642.
  • Carlo Strapparava and Rada Mihalcea. 2007. SemEval-2007 Task 14: Affective text. In SemEval 2007 — Proceedings of the 4th International Workshop on Semantic Evaluations @ ACL 2007. Prague, Czech Republic, June 23-24, 2007, pages 70–74.