Abstract

ABSTRACT Named Entity Recognition (NER) is a supervised machine learning task that finds various applications in automated content analysis, as the identification of entities is vital for understanding public discourse. However, sometimes the standard NER labels are not specific enough for a given domain. We introduce Public Entity Recognition (PER). PER is a domain-specific version of NER, that is trained for five entity types that are common to public discourse: politicians, parties, authorities, media, and journalists. PER can be used for pre-processing documents, in a pipeline with other classifiers or directly for analyzing information in texts. The taxonomy for PER is taken from the database of (German) public speakers and aims at low-threshold integration into computational social science research. We experiment with different training settings, involving weakly supervised training and training on manually annotated data. We evaluate multilingual transformer models of different sizes against rule-based entity matching and find that the models do not only outperform the baseline but also reach competitive absolute scores of around .8 and higher in F1. We further test for generalization and domain adaptation. We show that with only around 100–150 additional sentences, the model can be adapted to new languages.

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