Abstract

AbstractArgument mining (AM) aims to explain how individual argumentative discourse units (e.g. sentences or clauses) relate to each other and what roles they play in the overall argumentation. The automatic recognition of argumentative structure is attractive as it benefits various downstream tasks, such as text assessment, text generation, text improvement, and summarization. Existing studies focused on analyzing well-written texts provided by proficient authors. However, most English speakers in the world are non-native, and their texts are often poorly structured, particularly if they are still in the learning phase. Yet, there is no specific prior study on argumentative structure in non-native texts. In this article, we present the first corpus containing argumentative structure annotation for English-as-a-foreign-language (EFL) essays, together with a specially designed annotation scheme. The annotated corpus resulting from this work is called “ICNALE-AS” and contains 434 essays written by EFL learners from various Asian countries. The corpus presented here is particularly useful for the education domain. On the basis of the analysis of argumentation-related problems in EFL essays, educators can formulate ways to improve them so that they more closely resemble native-level productions. Our argument annotation scheme is demonstrably stable, achieving good inter-annotator agreement and near-perfect intra-annotator agreement. We also propose a set of novel document-level agreement metrics that are able to quantify structural agreement from various argumentation aspects, thus providing a more holistic analysis of the quality of the argumentative structure annotation. The metrics are evaluated in a crowd-sourced meta-evaluation experiment, achieving moderate to good correlation with human judgments.

Highlights

  • Argument mining (AM) is an emerging area in computational linguistics that aims to explain how argumentative discourse units function in the discourse and relate to each other, forming an argument as a whole (Lippi and Torroni 2016)

  • Essays are scored with respect to five aspects, namely content, organization, vocabulary, language use, and mechanics; the five scores are combined into a total score in the range of [0,100].g We manually investigated the quality of randomly sampled essays to check the total score at which the quality drops to a point where it is hard to understand what the students want to convey

  • With a finite number of labels, this means that none of the fixed labels is applicable. We note that such ambiguous cases do happen in Stab and Gurevych’s persuasive essay corpus; these cases were resolved according to topology, a treatment that is consistent with our decision not to label Argumentative components (ACs) in the first place

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Summary

Introduction

Argument mining (AM) is an emerging area in computational linguistics that aims to explain how argumentative discourse units (e.g. sentences, clauses) function in the discourse and relate to each other, forming an argument as a whole (Lippi and Torroni 2016). We annotate the argumentative structure in English-as-a-foreign-language (EFL) essays written by college students in various Asian countries. (S12)A complete change to the legal system regarding the smoking issue is necessary for the final settlement of this social problem Successful argumentative essays such as this example typically introduce the discussion topic (here, S1–S2), state their stance on the topic (S3), support their stance by presenting reasons from various perspectives (S4–S10), and provide a conclusion (S11) (Silva 1993; Bacha 2010). We introduce an annotation scheme for argumentative discourse structure of EFL essays and an associated corpus called ICNALE-AS.b This corpus contains 434 annotated essays written by Asian learners and is publicly available.c Inter-annotator and intra-annotator agreement studies were conducted that showed a reasonable level of agreement considering the difficulty of the task.

Related work
Existing corpora annotated with argumentative structure
Discourse model for EFL essay
Annotation of argumentative structure
Directed relation labels We use three directed relation labels
Annotation procedure and example
Figure
Description of resulting corpus and qualitative analysis
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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