Understanding and Identifying Rhetorical Questions in Social Media
Abstract
Social media provides a platform for seeking information from a large user base. Information seeking in social media, however, occurs simultaneously with users expressing their viewpoints by making statements. Rhetorical questions have the form of a question but serve the function of a statement and are an important tool employed by users to express their viewpoints. Therefore, rhetorical questions might mislead platforms assisting information seeking in social media. It becomes difficult to identify rhetorical questions as they are not syntactically different from other questions. In this article, we develop a framework to identify rhetorical questions by modeling some motivations of the users to post them. We focus on two motivations of the users drawing from linguistic theories to implicitly convey a message and to modify the strength of a statement previously made. We develop a quantitative framework from these motivations to identify rhetorical questions in social media. We evaluate the framework using two datasets of questions posted on a social media platform Twitter and demonstrate its effectiveness in identifying rhetorical questions. This is the first framework, to the best of our knowledge, to model the possible motivations for posting rhetorical questions to identify them on social media platforms.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Pub Defense Publication
- Publication Date
- Jan 10, 2018
- Source ID
- 10.1145/3108364
Entities
People
- Huan Liu
- Jiliang Tang
- Suhang Wang
- Suhas Ranganath
- Xia Hu
Organizations
- Arizona State University
- Michigan State University
- Office of Naval Research