The influence of context on sentence acceptability judgements
Jean-Philippe Bernardy, Shalom Lappin, et al.
ACL 2018
Predicting a reader's rating of text quality is a challenging task that involves estimating different subjective aspects of the text, like structure, clarity, etc. Such subjective aspects are better handled using cognitive information. One such source of cognitive information is gaze behaviour. In this paper, we show that gaze behaviour does indeed help in effectively predicting the rating of text quality. To do this, we first model text quality as a function of three properties - organization, coherence and cohesion. Then, we demonstrate how capturing gaze behaviour helps in predicting each of these properties, and hence the overall quality, by reporting improvements obtained by adding gaze features to traditional textual features for score prediction. We also hypothesize that if a reader has fully understood the text, the corresponding gaze behaviour would give a better indication of the assigned rating, as opposed to partial understanding. Our experiments validate this hypothesis by showing greater agreement between the given rating and the predicted rating when the reader has a full understanding of the text.
Jean-Philippe Bernardy, Shalom Lappin, et al.
ACL 2018
Cicero dos Santos, Igor Melnyk, et al.
ACL 2018
Abhijit Mishra, Diptesh Kanojia, et al.
ACL 2016
Gaurav Pandey, Danish Contractor, et al.
ACL 2018