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Auteurs principaux: González-Silot, Santiago, Montoro-Montarroso, Andrés, Cámara, Eugenio Martínez, Gómez-Romero, Juan
Format: Preprint
Publié: 2025
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Accès en ligne:https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.04863
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author González-Silot, Santiago
Montoro-Montarroso, Andrés
Cámara, Eugenio Martínez
Gómez-Romero, Juan
author_facet González-Silot, Santiago
Montoro-Montarroso, Andrés
Cámara, Eugenio Martínez
Gómez-Romero, Juan
contents The automatic detection of disinformation presents a significant challenge in the field of natural language processing. This task addresses a multifaceted societal and communication issue, which needs approaches that extend beyond the identification of general linguistic patterns through data-driven algorithms. In this research work, we hypothesise that text classification methods are not able to capture the nuances of disinformation and they often ground their decision in superfluous features. Hence, we apply a post-hoc explainability method (SHAP, SHapley Additive exPlanations) to identify spurious elements with high impact on the classification models. Our findings show that non-informative elements (e.g., URLs and emoticons) should be removed and named entities (e.g., Rwanda) should be pseudo-anonymized before training to avoid models' bias and increase their generalization capabilities. We evaluate this methodology with internal dataset and external dataset before and after applying extended data preprocessing and named entity replacement. The results show that our proposal enhances on average the performance of a disinformation classification method with external test data in 65.78% without a significant decrease of the internal test performance.
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spellingShingle Enhancing Disinformation Detection with Explainable AI and Named Entity Replacement
González-Silot, Santiago
Montoro-Montarroso, Andrés
Cámara, Eugenio Martínez
Gómez-Romero, Juan
Computation and Language
The automatic detection of disinformation presents a significant challenge in the field of natural language processing. This task addresses a multifaceted societal and communication issue, which needs approaches that extend beyond the identification of general linguistic patterns through data-driven algorithms. In this research work, we hypothesise that text classification methods are not able to capture the nuances of disinformation and they often ground their decision in superfluous features. Hence, we apply a post-hoc explainability method (SHAP, SHapley Additive exPlanations) to identify spurious elements with high impact on the classification models. Our findings show that non-informative elements (e.g., URLs and emoticons) should be removed and named entities (e.g., Rwanda) should be pseudo-anonymized before training to avoid models' bias and increase their generalization capabilities. We evaluate this methodology with internal dataset and external dataset before and after applying extended data preprocessing and named entity replacement. The results show that our proposal enhances on average the performance of a disinformation classification method with external test data in 65.78% without a significant decrease of the internal test performance.
title Enhancing Disinformation Detection with Explainable AI and Named Entity Replacement
topic Computation and Language
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.04863