Exploring zero-shot and joint training cross-lingual strategies for aspect-based sentiment analysis based on contextualized multilingual language models

ABSTRACTAspect-based sentiment analysis (ABSA) has attracted many researchers' attention in recent years. However, the lack of benchmark datasets for specific languages is a common challenge because of the prohibitive cost of manual annotation. The zero-shot cross-lingual strategy can be applie...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dang Van Thin, Hung Quoc Ngo, Duong Ngoc Hao, Ngan Luu-Thuy Nguyen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2023-04-01
Series:Journal of Information and Telecommunication
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/24751839.2023.2173843
Description
Summary:ABSTRACTAspect-based sentiment analysis (ABSA) has attracted many researchers' attention in recent years. However, the lack of benchmark datasets for specific languages is a common challenge because of the prohibitive cost of manual annotation. The zero-shot cross-lingual strategy can be applied to solve this gap in research. Moreover, previous works mainly focus on improving the performance of supervised ABSA with pre-trained languages. Therefore, there are few to no systematic comparisons of the benefits of multilingual models in zero-shot and joint training cross-lingual for the ABSA task. In this paper, we focus on the zero-shot and joint training cross-lingual transfer task for the ABSA. We fine-tune the latest pre-trained multilingual language models on the source language, and then it is directly predicted in the target language. For the joint learning scenario, the models are trained on the combination of multiple source languages. Our experimental results show that (1) fine-tuning multilingual models achieve promising performances in the zero-shot cross-lingual scenario; (2) fine-tuning models on the combination training data of multiple source languages outperforms monolingual data in the joint training scenario. Furthermore, the experimental results indicated that choosing other languages instead of English as the source language can give promising results in the low-resource languages scenario.
ISSN:2475-1839
2475-1847