Abstract

State-of-the-art models of artificial intelligence are developed in the black-box paradigm, in which sensitive information is limited to input-output interfaces, while internal representations are not interpretable. The resulting algorithms lack explainability and transparency, requested for responsible application. This paper addresses the problem by a method for finding Osgood’s dimensions of affective meaning in multidimensional space of a pre-trained word2vec model of natural language. Three affective dimensions are found based on eight semantic prototypes, composed of individual words. Evaluation axis is found in 300-dimensional word2vec space as a difference between positive and negative prototypes. Potency and activity axes are defined from six process-semantic prototypes (perception, analysis, planning, action, progress, and evaluation), representing phases of a generalized circular process in that plane. All dimensions are found in simple analytical form, not requiring additional training. Dimensions are nearly orthogonal, as expected for independent semantic factors. Osgood’s semantics of any word2vec object is then retrieved by a simple projection of the corresponding vector to the identified dimensions. The developed approach opens the possibility for interpreting the inside of black box-type algorithms in natural affective-semantic categories, and provides insights into foundational principles of distributive vector models of natural language. In the reverse direction, the established mapping opens machine-learning models as rich sources of data for cognitive-behavioral research and technology.

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