| Emotion | Code | Example Use | |---------|------|--------------| | Joy | JOY | [JOY:0.8]What a beautiful sunrise[/JOY] | | Sadness | SAD | [SAD:0.7]He didn't say goodbye[/SAD] | | Anger | ANG | [ANG:0.9]How dare you[/ANG] | | Fear | FR | [FR:0.6]I heard a noise downstairs[/FR] | | Trust | TR | [TR:0.8]I believe you completely[/TR] | | Disgust | DIS | [DIS:0.7]That's repulsive[/DIS] | | Surprise | SUR | [SUR:0.5]Oh, you're here already[/SUR] | | Anticipation | ANT | [ANT:0.6]I can't wait to see what happens[/ANT] | For continuous affect modeling, STR supports the dimensional model: [V:A | valence:-1..+1, arousal:0..1]
1. Introduction: The Need for Emotional Structure in Text Natural language is inherently ambiguous. While a sentence like "That's great" can express genuine enthusiasm, sarcasm, or polite dismissal, traditional text encodes none of these distinctions explicitly. For decades, computational linguistics focused on syntax and semantics, leaving affect—the emotional subtext—as a secondary, often poorly-addressed problem. sentic text regular
[SAD:0.6]The old photograph fell out of the book.[/SAD] [intent: genuine][JOY:0.3+SAD:0.4]It was of our last summer at the lake house. We all looked so happy, even though none of us knew it was the final time.[/JOY+SAD][/intent] [V:A | v=-0.7, a=0.8][ANG:0.5]Why did we let it fall apart?[/V:A][/ANG] | Emotion | Code | Example Use |
[intent: sarcasm][JOY:0.9]Oh, fantastic, another meeting.[/JOY][/intent] Here, high joy intensity is marked as sarcastic, reversing its pragmatic meaning. 4. A Complete Example of Sentic Text Regular Raw STR document: For decades, computational linguistics focused on syntax and
| Emotion | Code | Example Use | |---------|------|--------------| | Joy | JOY | [JOY:0.8]What a beautiful sunrise[/JOY] | | Sadness | SAD | [SAD:0.7]He didn't say goodbye[/SAD] | | Anger | ANG | [ANG:0.9]How dare you[/ANG] | | Fear | FR | [FR:0.6]I heard a noise downstairs[/FR] | | Trust | TR | [TR:0.8]I believe you completely[/TR] | | Disgust | DIS | [DIS:0.7]That's repulsive[/DIS] | | Surprise | SUR | [SUR:0.5]Oh, you're here already[/SUR] | | Anticipation | ANT | [ANT:0.6]I can't wait to see what happens[/ANT] | For continuous affect modeling, STR supports the dimensional model: [V:A | valence:-1..+1, arousal:0..1]
1. Introduction: The Need for Emotional Structure in Text Natural language is inherently ambiguous. While a sentence like "That's great" can express genuine enthusiasm, sarcasm, or polite dismissal, traditional text encodes none of these distinctions explicitly. For decades, computational linguistics focused on syntax and semantics, leaving affect—the emotional subtext—as a secondary, often poorly-addressed problem.
[SAD:0.6]The old photograph fell out of the book.[/SAD] [intent: genuine][JOY:0.3+SAD:0.4]It was of our last summer at the lake house. We all looked so happy, even though none of us knew it was the final time.[/JOY+SAD][/intent] [V:A | v=-0.7, a=0.8][ANG:0.5]Why did we let it fall apart?[/V:A][/ANG]
[intent: sarcasm][JOY:0.9]Oh, fantastic, another meeting.[/JOY][/intent] Here, high joy intensity is marked as sarcastic, reversing its pragmatic meaning. 4. A Complete Example of Sentic Text Regular Raw STR document: