Overview of RepLab 2013: Evaluating online reputation monitoring systems

Authors
  • E. Amigó
  • J. Carrillo de Albornoz
  • I. Chugur
  • A. Corujo
Publication date 2013
Host editors
  • P. Forner
  • H. Müller
  • R. Paredes
  • P. Rosso
  • B. Stein
Book title Information Access Evaluation : Multilinguality, Multimodality, and Visualization
Book subtitle 4th International Conference of the CLEF Initiative, CLEF 2013, Valencia, Spain, September 23-26, 2013 : proceedings
ISBN
  • 9783642408014
ISBN (electronic)
  • 9783642408021
Series Lecture Notes in Computer Science
Event Information access evaluation: multilinguality, multimodality, and visualization: 4th International Conference of the CLEF Initiative, CLEF 2013
Pages (from-to) 333-352
Publisher Heidelberg: Springer
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Informatics Institute (IVI)
Abstract
This paper summarizes the goals, organization, and results of the second RepLab competitive evaluation campaign for Online Reputation Management Systems (RepLab 2013). RepLab focused on the process of monitoring the reputation of companies and individuals, and asked participant systems to annotate different types of information on tweets containing the names of several companies: first tweets had to be classified as related or unrelated to the entity; relevant tweets had to be classified according to their polarity for reputation (Does the content of the tweet have positive or negative implications for the reputation of the entity?), clustered in coherent topics, and clusters had to be ranked according to their priority (potential reputation problems had to come first). The gold standard consists of more than 140,000 tweets annotated by a group of trained annotators supervised and monitored by reputation experts.
Document type Conference contribution
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-40802-1_31
Permalink to this page
Back