Publication:
Discovering black lives matter events in the United States: shared task 3, CASE 2021

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Giorgi, Salvatore
Zavarella, Vanni
Tanev, Hristo
Stefanovitch, Nicolas
Hwang, Sy
Hettiarachchi, Hansi
Ranasinghe, Tharindu
Kalyan, Vivek
Tan, Paul
Tan, Shaun

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Publication Date

2021

Language

English

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Conference proceeding

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Abstract

Evaluating the state-of-the-art event detection systems on determining spatio-temporal distribution of the events on the ground is performed unfrequently. But, the ability to both (1) extract events "in the wild" from text and (2) properly evaluate event detection systems has potential to support a wide variety of tasks such as monitoring the activity of socio-political movements, examining media coverage and public support of these movements, and informing policy decisions. Therefore, we study performance of the best event detection systems on detecting Black Lives Matter (BLM) events from tweets and news articles. The murder of George Floyd, an unarmed Black man, at the hands of police officers received global attention throughout the second half of 2020. Protests against police violence emerged worldwide and the BLM movement, which was once mostly regulated to the United States, was now seeing activity globally. This shared task asks participants to identify BLM related events from large unstructured data sources, using systems pretrained to extract socio-political events from text. We evaluate several metrics, assessing each system's ability to evolution of protest events both temporally and spatially. Results show that identifying daily protest counts is an easier task than classifying spatial and temporal protest trends simultaneously, with maximum performance of 0.745 (Spearman) and 0.210 (Pearson r), respectively. Additionally, all baselines and participant systems suffered from low recall (max.5.08), confirming the high impact of media sourcing in the modelling of protest movements.

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Source:

Case 2021: The 4th Workshop on Challenges and Applications of Automated Extraction of Socio-Political Events From Text (Case)

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Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL)

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Computer science, Artificial intelligence, Interdisciplinary applications, Linguistics

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