Humor in Word Embeddings: Cockamamie Gobbledegook for Nincompoops
Abstract
While humor is often thought to be beyond the reach of Natural Language Processing, we show that several aspects of single-word humor correlate with simple linear directions in Word Embeddings. In particular: (a) the word vectors capture multiple aspects discussed in humor theories from various disciplines; (b) each individual’s sense of humor can be represented by a vector, which can predict differences in people’s senses of humor on new, unrated, words; and (c) upon clustering humor ratings of multiple demographic groups, different humor preferences emerge across the different groups. Humor ratings are taken from the work of Engelthaler and Hills (2017) as well as from an original crowdsourcing study of 120,000 words. Our dataset further includes annotations for the theoretically-motivated humor features we identify.
Cite
Text
Gultchin et al. "Humor in Word Embeddings: Cockamamie Gobbledegook for Nincompoops." International Conference on Machine Learning, 2019.Markdown
[Gultchin et al. "Humor in Word Embeddings: Cockamamie Gobbledegook for Nincompoops." International Conference on Machine Learning, 2019.](https://mlanthology.org/icml/2019/gultchin2019icml-humor/)BibTeX
@inproceedings{gultchin2019icml-humor,
title = {{Humor in Word Embeddings: Cockamamie Gobbledegook for Nincompoops}},
author = {Gultchin, Limor and Patterson, Genevieve and Baym, Nancy and Swinger, Nathaniel and Kalai, Adam},
booktitle = {International Conference on Machine Learning},
year = {2019},
pages = {2474-2483},
volume = {97},
url = {https://mlanthology.org/icml/2019/gultchin2019icml-humor/}
}