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Rethinking Offensive Text Detection as a Multi-Hop Reasoning Problem

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arxiv 2204.10521 v1 pith:GP5OX474 submitted 2022-04-22 cs.CL cs.AIcs.HC

Rethinking Offensive Text Detection as a Multi-Hop Reasoning Problem

classification cs.CL cs.AIcs.HC
keywords offensivereasoningdetectionchainsinterpretationtextexistingmodels
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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We introduce the task of implicit offensive text detection in dialogues, where a statement may have either an offensive or non-offensive interpretation, depending on the listener and context. We argue that reasoning is crucial for understanding this broader class of offensive utterances and release SLIGHT, a dataset to support research on this task. Experiments using the data show that state-of-the-art methods of offense detection perform poorly when asked to detect implicitly offensive statements, achieving only ${\sim} 11\%$ accuracy. In contrast to existing offensive text detection datasets, SLIGHT features human-annotated chains of reasoning which describe the mental process by which an offensive interpretation can be reached from each ambiguous statement. We explore the potential for a multi-hop reasoning approach by utilizing existing entailment models to score the probability of these chains and show that even naive reasoning models can yield improved performance in most situations. Furthermore, analysis of the chains provides insight into the human interpretation process and emphasizes the importance of incorporating additional commonsense knowledge.

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