Supervised topic modeling algorithms have been successfully applied to multi-label document classification tasks.Representative models include labeled latent Dirichlet allocation(L-LDA)and dependency-LDA.However,these...Supervised topic modeling algorithms have been successfully applied to multi-label document classification tasks.Representative models include labeled latent Dirichlet allocation(L-LDA)and dependency-LDA.However,these models neglect the class frequency information of words(i.e.,the number of classes where a word has occurred in the training data),which is significant for classification.To address this,we propose a method,namely the class frequency weight(CF-weight),to weight words by considering the class frequency knowledge.This CF-weight is based on the intuition that a word with higher(lower)class frequency will be less(more)discriminative.In this study,the CF-weight is used to improve L-LDA and dependency-LDA.A number of experiments have been conducted on real-world multi-label datasets.Experimental results demonstrate that CF-weight based algorithms are competitive with the existing supervised topic models.展开更多
基金Project supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China(No.61602204)
文摘Supervised topic modeling algorithms have been successfully applied to multi-label document classification tasks.Representative models include labeled latent Dirichlet allocation(L-LDA)and dependency-LDA.However,these models neglect the class frequency information of words(i.e.,the number of classes where a word has occurred in the training data),which is significant for classification.To address this,we propose a method,namely the class frequency weight(CF-weight),to weight words by considering the class frequency knowledge.This CF-weight is based on the intuition that a word with higher(lower)class frequency will be less(more)discriminative.In this study,the CF-weight is used to improve L-LDA and dependency-LDA.A number of experiments have been conducted on real-world multi-label datasets.Experimental results demonstrate that CF-weight based algorithms are competitive with the existing supervised topic models.