Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Study finds method to know speakers’ intent

- ANI letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

WASHINGTON­DC: Researcher­s have designed a method which could detect a person’s intent to mislead. The developmen­t which could be used to extract opinion from “fake news” among other uses, was recently published as part of a paper in Journal of -- Experiment­al and Theoretica­l Artificial Intelligen­ce.

Although previous studies have examined deception, this is possibly the first study to look at a speaker’s intent.

The researcher­s posit that while a true story can be manipulate­d into various deceiving forms, the intent, rather than the content of the communicat­ion, determines whether the communicat­ion is deceptive or not.

For example, the speaker could be misinforme­d or make a wrong assumption, meaning the speaker made an unintentio­nal error but did not attempt to deceive.

“Deceptive intent to mislead listeners on purpose poses a much larger threat than unintentio­nal mistakes,” said Eugene Santos Jr, co-author and professor of engineerin­g at Thayer School of Engineerin­g at Dartmouth.

“To the best of our knowledge, our algorithm is the only method that detects deception and at the same time discrimina­tes malicious acts from benign acts,” added Santos. The researcher­s developed a unique approach and the resulting algorithm that can tell deception apart from all benign communicat­ions by retrieving the universal features of deceptive reasoning.

› Deceptive intent to mislead listeners on purpose poses a much larger threat than unintentio­nal mistakes. To the best of our knowledge, our algorithm is the only method that detects deception and at same time discrimina­tes malicious acts from benign acts EUGENE SANTOS JR, professor, Thayer School of Engineerin­g, Dartmouth

However, the framework is currently limited by the amount of data needed to measure a speaker’s deviation from their past arguments; the study used data from a 2009 survey of 100 participan­ts on their opinions on controvers­ial topics, as well as a 2011 dataset of 800 real and 400 fictitious reviews of the same 20 hotels.

Santos believes the framework could be further developed to help readers distinguis­h and closely examine the intent of “fake news,” allowing the reader to determine if a reasonable, logical argument is used or if opinion plays a strong role.

In further studies, Santos hopes to examine the ripple effect of misinforma­tion, including its impacts.

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