metadata
language: en
thumbnail: https://pbs.twimg.com/profile_images/1092721745994440704/d6R-AHzj_400x400.jpg
tags:
- propaganda
- bert
license: MIT
datasets:
- null
metrics:
- null
Propaganda Techniques Analysis BERT
This model is a BERT based model to make predictions of propaganda techniques in news articles in English. The model is described in this paper.
Model description
Please find propaganda definition here: https://propaganda.qcri.org/annotations/definitions.html
You can also try the model in action here: https://www.tanbih.org/prta
How to use
>>> from transformers import BertTokenizerFast
>>> from .model import BertForTokenAndSequenceJointClassification
>>>
>>> tokenizer = BertTokenizerFast.from_pretrained('bert-base-cased')
>>> model = BertForTokenAndSequenceJointClassification.from_pretrained(
>>> "QCRI/PropagandaTechniquesAnalysis-en-BERT",
>>> revision="v0.1.0",
>>> )
>>>
>>> inputs = tokenizer.encode_plus("Hello, my dog is cute", return_tensors="pt")
>>> outputs = model(**inputs)
>>> sequence_class_index = torch.argmax(outputs.sequence_logits, dim=-1)
>>> sequence_class = model.sequence_tags[sequence_class_index[0]]
>>> token_class_index = torch.argmax(outputs.token_logits, dim=-1)
>>> tokens = tokenizer.convert_ids_to_tokens(inputs.input_ids[0][1:-1])
>>> tags = [model.token_tags[i] for i in token_class_index[0].tolist()[1:-1]]
BibTeX entry and citation info
@inproceedings{da-san-martino-etal-2019-fine,
title = "Fine-Grained Analysis of Propaganda in News Article",
author = "Da San Martino, Giovanni and
Yu, Seunghak and
Barr{\'o}n-Cede{\~n}o, Alberto and
Petrov, Rostislav and
Nakov, Preslav",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 2019 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing and the 9th International Joint Conference on Natural Language Processing (EMNLP-IJCNLP)",
month = nov,
year = "2019",
address = "Hong Kong, China",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://www.aclweb.org/anthology/D19-1565",
doi = "10.18653/v1/D19-1565",
pages = "5636--5646",
abstract = "Propaganda aims at influencing people{'}s mindset with the purpose of advancing a specific agenda. Previous work has addressed propaganda detection at document level, typically labelling all articles from a propagandistic news outlet as propaganda. Such noisy gold labels inevitably affect the quality of any learning system trained on them. A further issue with most existing systems is the lack of explainability. To overcome these limitations, we propose a novel task: performing fine-grained analysis of texts by detecting all fragments that contain propaganda techniques as well as their type. In particular, we create a corpus of news articles manually annotated at fragment level with eighteen propaganda techniques and propose a suitable evaluation measure. We further design a novel multi-granularity neural network, and we show that it outperforms several strong BERT-based baselines.",
}