Search Results for author: Kyriaki Kalimeri

Found 6 papers, 2 papers with code

MoralBERT: Detecting Moral Values in Social Discourse

no code implementations12 Mar 2024 Vjosa Preniqi, Iacopo Ghinassi, Kyriaki Kalimeri, Charalampos Saitis

Experiments in an out-of-domain setting, instead, suggest that further work is needed for existing domain adaptation techniques to generalise between different social media platforms, especially for the multi-label task.

Domain Adaptation

Leave no Place Behind: Improved Geolocation in Humanitarian Documents

no code implementations6 Sep 2023 Enrico M. Belliardo, Kyriaki Kalimeri, Yelena Mejova

Geographical location is a crucial element of humanitarian response, outlining vulnerable populations, ongoing events, and available resources.

Humanitarian named-entity-recognition +2

LibertyMFD: A Lexicon to Assess the Moral Foundation of Liberty

no code implementations14 Sep 2022 Oscar Araque, Lorenzo Gatti, Kyriaki Kalimeri

The LibertyMFD dictionary can be a valuable tool for policymakers to understand diverse viewpoints on controversial social issues such as vaccination, abortion, or even uprisings, as they happen and on a large scale.

"More Than Words": Linking Music Preferences and Moral Values Through Lyrics

1 code implementation2 Sep 2022 Vjosa Preniqi, Kyriaki Kalimeri, Charalampos Saitis

This study explores the association between music preferences and moral values by applying text analysis techniques to lyrics.

MoralStrength: Exploiting a Moral Lexicon and Embedding Similarity for Moral Foundations Prediction

1 code implementation17 Apr 2019 Oscar Araque, Lorenzo Gatti, Kyriaki Kalimeri

In this study, we present MoralStrength, a lexicon of approximately 1, 000 lemmas, obtained as an extension of the Moral Foundations Dictionary, based on WordNet synsets.

Decision Making LEMMA +3

Predicting Demographics, Moral Foundations, and Human Values from Digital Behaviors

no code implementations5 Dec 2017 Kyriaki Kalimeri, Mariano G. Beiro, Matteo Delfino, Robert Raleigh, Ciro Cattuto

Personal electronic devices including smartphones give access to behavioural signals that can be used to learn about the characteristics and preferences of individuals.

Attribute

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