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Using artificial intelligence to explore sound symbolic expressions of gender in American English.
Kilpatrick, Alexander; Cwiek, Aleksandra.
Afiliación
  • Kilpatrick A; International Communication, Nagoya University of Commerce and Business, Nagoya, Aichi, Japan.
  • Cwiek A; Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft, Berlin, Germany.
PeerJ Comput Sci ; 10: e1811, 2024.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38283586
ABSTRACT
This study investigates the extent to which gender can be inferred from the phonemes that make up given names and words in American English. Two extreme gradient boosted algorithms were constructed to classify words according to gender, one using a list of the most common given names (N∼1,000) in North America and the other using the Glasgow Norms (N∼5,500), a corpus consisting of nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs which have each been assigned a psycholinguistic score of how they are associated with male or female behaviour. Both models report significant findings, but the model constructed using given names achieves a greater accuracy despite being trained on a smaller dataset suggesting that gender is expressed more robustly in given names than in other word classes. Feature importance was examined to determine which features were contributing to the decision-making process. Feature importance scores revealed a general pattern across both models, but also show that not all word classes express gender the same way. Finally, the models were reconstructed and tested on the opposite dataset to determine whether they were useful in classifying opposite samples. The results showed that the models were not as accurate when classifying opposite samples, suggesting that they are more suited to classifying words of the same class.
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Texto completo: 1 Colección: 01-internacional Base de datos: MEDLINE Tipo de estudio: Prognostic_studies Aspecto: Determinantes_sociais_saude Idioma: En Revista: PeerJ Comput Sci Año: 2024 Tipo del documento: Article País de afiliación: Japón Pais de publicación: Estados Unidos

Texto completo: 1 Colección: 01-internacional Base de datos: MEDLINE Tipo de estudio: Prognostic_studies Aspecto: Determinantes_sociais_saude Idioma: En Revista: PeerJ Comput Sci Año: 2024 Tipo del documento: Article País de afiliación: Japón Pais de publicación: Estados Unidos