Inferring Interpersonal Relations in Narrative Summaries

Abstract

Characterizing relationships between people is fundamental for the understanding of narratives. In this work, we address the problem of inferring the polarity of relationships between people in narrative summaries. We formulate the problem as a joint structured prediction for each narrative, and present a general model that combines evidence from linguistic and semantic features, as well as features based on the structure of the social community in the text. We additionally provide a clustering-based approach that can exploit regularities in narrative types. e.g., learn an affinity for love-triangles in romantic stories. On a dataset of movie summaries from Wikipedia, our structured models provide more than 30% error-reduction over a competitive baseline that considers pairs of characters in isolation.

Cite

Text

Srivastava et al. "Inferring Interpersonal Relations in Narrative Summaries." AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 2016. doi:10.1609/AAAI.V30I1.10349

Markdown

[Srivastava et al. "Inferring Interpersonal Relations in Narrative Summaries." AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 2016.](https://mlanthology.org/aaai/2016/srivastava2016aaai-inferring/) doi:10.1609/AAAI.V30I1.10349

BibTeX

@inproceedings{srivastava2016aaai-inferring,
  title     = {{Inferring Interpersonal Relations in Narrative Summaries}},
  author    = {Srivastava, Shashank and Chaturvedi, Snigdha and Mitchell, Tom M.},
  booktitle = {AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence},
  year      = {2016},
  pages     = {2807-2813},
  doi       = {10.1609/AAAI.V30I1.10349},
  url       = {https://mlanthology.org/aaai/2016/srivastava2016aaai-inferring/}
}