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Title: Ideology Prediction from Scarce and Biased Supervision: Learn to Disregard the “What” and Focus on the “How”!
We propose a novel supervised learning approach for political ideology prediction (PIP) that is capable of predicting out-of-distribution inputs. This problem is motivated by the fact that manual data-labeling is expensive, while self-reported labels are often scarce and exhibit significant selection bias. We propose a novel statistical model that decomposes the document embeddings into a linear superposition of two vectors; a latent neutral context vector independent of ideology, and a latent position vector aligned with ideology. We train an end-to-end model that has intermediate contextual and positional vectors as outputs. At deployment time, our model predicts labels for input documents by exclusively leveraging the predicted positional vectors. On two benchmark datasets we show that our model is capable of outputting predictions even when trained with as little as 5% biased data, and is significantly more accurate than the state-of-the-art. Through crowd-sourcing we validate the neutrality of contextual vectors, and show that context filtering results in ideological concentration, allowing for prediction on out-of-distribution examples.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
1955981
PAR ID:
10447708
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ;
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Association for Computational Linguistics
Page Range / eLocation ID:
9529 to 9549
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
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