Abstract
Hate speech propagated online has been a long-trailing issue which induces several negative effects on society. The current efforts for the automated detection of hate speech online have utilized machine learning techniques in order to try and solve the issue as a classification problem. However, the significant drawback that has been identified in existing literature is that the inability of existing systems to tackle the ambiguity when it comes to hate speech detection, more specifically differentiating between hateful and offensive content. This research aims to tackle this issue of ambiguity in hopes of improving hate speech detection in general. The proposed system will utilize human reasoning techniques such as ontologies and fuzzy logics along with sentiment analysis in order to detect hate speech and deconstruct the ambiguity present. The results of the proposed approach show that the system can perform well when it comes to differentiating between hateful and offensive content and it is able to outperform existing systems in crucial factors. Yet, the deconstruction of ambiguity becomes difficult when there are a smaller number of hateful keywords present although the fuzzy control system was able to compensate in most cases. Thereby this research stresses the need for considering the disambiguation between hateful and offensive content when it comes to hate speech detection and utilization of human reasoning techniques to further facilitate this process.
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