We received the best paper award for our paper "Automatic thematic content analysis: Finding frames in news” at the 5th International Conference on Social Informatics (SocInfo2013), in Kyoto, Japan.

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We received the best paper award for our paper "Automatic thematic content analysis: Finding frames in news” at the 5th International Conference on Social Informatics (SocInfo2013), in Kyoto, Japan.
Automatic Thematic Content Analysis: Finding Frames in News
"Automatic Thematic Content Analysis: Finding Frames in News" by Daan Odijk, Björn Burscher, Rens Vliegenthart and Maarten de Rijke has been presented at SocInfo2013. It was awarded the best paper award.
Framing in news is the way in which journalists depict an issue in terms of a `central organizing idea.' Frames can be a perspective on an issue. We explore the automatic classification of four generic news frames: conflict, human interest, economic consequences, and morality. Complex characteristics of messages such as frames have been studied using thematic content analysis. Indicator questions are formulated, which are then manually coded by humans after reading a text and combined into a characterization of the message. We operationalize this as a classification task and, inspired by the way-of-working of media analysts, we propose a two-stage approach, where we first rate a news article using indicator questions for a frame and then use the outcomes to predict whether a frame is present. We approach human accuracy on almost all indicator questions and frames.
D. Odijk, B. Burscher, R. Vliegenthart, M. de Rijke. 2013. Automatic Thematic Content Analysis: Finding Frames in News. SocInfo2013: 5th International Conference on Social Informatics. [BibTex]