Results 101 to 110 of about 72,126 (279)
A Deep Learning Approach for Sarcasm Detection on Twitter [PDF]
Sarcasm is a form of speech in which a person expresses his opinion implicitly. We may encounter a seemingly positive sentence in sarcasm, but the speaker has a contrary opinion. Sarcasm can be recognized in spoken language based on body language and the
Mohammad Javad Shayegan, Sara Kojouri
doaj
ABSTRACT This article reevaluates Walling as a neglected precursor to American Western Marxism, arguing that his 1912–1914 trilogy synthesized Marxist theory of his time and Deweyan pragmatism into a distinct “pragmatist conception of history.” Born into “aristocracy” yet radicalized, Walling's unique trajectory—as a co‐founder of the NAACP and critic ...
Paulo Antunes
wiley +1 more source
Multimodal Chinese Sarcasm Detection Integrating Audio Attributes and Textual Features
Sarcasm often arises from subtle contrasts between literal meaning and speaker intention. As online communication increasingly includes voice-based content, detecting sarcasm across speech and text becomes more important—and more complex.
Huixin Wu +3 more
doaj +1 more source
Playing the System: Electoral Bias in the 2024 UK General Election
Abstract The UK's 2024 general election was the least proportional of modern times. Labour's substantial parliamentary majority rested on the smallest ever winning party vote share. The Conservatives, meanwhile, suffered one of their worst ever results.
Charles Pattie, David Cutts
wiley +1 more source
Challenging the ‘S’ of Mayoral Strategic Authorities: Standardisation over Strategy?
Abstract The Labour government's English Devolution and Community Empowerment Bill (EDCEB) represents the most ambitious attempt yet to embed devolution and ‘empower communities’ across England, completing the map of devolution under mayoral strategic authorities.
Nicholas P. Sweeney
wiley +1 more source
Researchers in the field of literary and psychological studies agree that literature represents a field in which the meanings and emotions of the soul are expressed, and that sarcasm is an essence of psychological emotions that is manifested in many ...
Muhammad Abdul Rehman
doaj +1 more source
Was that Sarcasm?: A Literature Survey on Sarcasm Detection
Sarcasm is hard to interpret as human beings. Being able to interpret sarcasm is often termed as a sign of intelligence, given the complex nature of sarcasm. Hence, this is a field of Natural Language Processing which is still complex for computers to decipher.
Bagga, Harleen Kaur +3 more
openaire +2 more sources
The production‐distribution‐consumption triad has structured how anthropologists understand exchange for roughly a century. This article argues for expanding this triad to include an explicit focus on acquisition – the systems, processes, and practices of acquiring.
Hanna Garth
wiley +1 more source
Why do some women choose to submit to their husbands in marriage? In anthropology, the paradox of ‘chosen submission’ has famously been explored by Saba Mahmood. Her work amongst Egyptian women donning the veil in the Islamic da'wa movement spotlights the notion of ‘piety’ to explore how devotion to God can act as a powerful motivator of human ...
Naomi Richman
wiley +1 more source
What does it take to turn a tool into a talking tool and that into an ultimate authority? Generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) in its diverse forms, such as large language models (LLMs), is celebrated as a useful tool. But LLM‐based conversational agents, or chatbots, the software applications through which ordinary users are likely to engage ...
Webb Keane
wiley +1 more source

