Unsupervised Discovery of Biographical Structure from Text

David Bamman, Noah A. Smith


Abstract
We present a method for discovering abstract event classes in biographies, based on a probabilistic latent-variable model. Taking as input timestamped text, we exploit latent correlations among events to learn a set of event classes (such as Born, Graduates High School, and Becomes Citizen), along with the typical times in a person’s life when those events occur. In a quantitative evaluation at the task of predicting a person’s age for a given event, we find that our generative model outperforms a strong linear regression baseline, along with simpler variants of the model that ablate some features. The abstract event classes that we learn allow us to perform a large-scale analysis of 242,970 Wikipedia biographies. Though it is known that women are greatly underrepresented on Wikipedia—not only as editors (Wikipedia, 2011) but also as subjects of articles (Reagle and Rhue, 2011)—we find that there is a bias in their characterization as well, with biographies of women containing significantly more emphasis on events of marriage and divorce than biographies of men.
Anthology ID:
Q14-1029
Volume:
Transactions of the Association for Computational Linguistics, Volume 2
Month:
Year:
2014
Address:
Cambridge, MA
Editors:
Dekang Lin, Michael Collins, Lillian Lee
Venue:
TACL
SIG:
Publisher:
MIT Press
Note:
Pages:
363–376
Language:
URL:
https://aclanthology.org/Q14-1029
DOI:
10.1162/tacl_a_00189
Bibkey:
Cite (ACL):
David Bamman and Noah A. Smith. 2014. Unsupervised Discovery of Biographical Structure from Text. Transactions of the Association for Computational Linguistics, 2:363–376.
Cite (Informal):
Unsupervised Discovery of Biographical Structure from Text (Bamman & Smith, TACL 2014)
Copy Citation:
PDF:
https://aclanthology.org/Q14-1029.pdf