2013
DOI: 10.5195/lesli.2013.5
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Seeing through Deception: A Computational Approach to Deceit Detection in Spanish Written Communication

Abstract: The present paper addresses the question of the nature of deceptive language. Specifically, the main aim of this piece of research is the exploration of deceit in Spanish written communication. We have designed an automatic classifier based on Support Vector Machines (SVM) for the identification of deception in an ad hoc opinion corpus. In order to test the effectiveness of the LIWC2001 categories in Spanish, we have drawn a comparison with a Bag-of-Words (BoW) model. The results indicate that the classificati… Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(33 citation statements)
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“…The authors explored several strategies for identifying deceptive clues, such as utterance length, LIWC features, lemmas and part of speech patterns. (Almela et al, 2012) studied the deception detection in Spanish text by using SVM classifiers and linguistic categories, obtained from the Spanish version of the LIWC dictionary. A study on Chinese deception is presented in (Zhang et al, 2009), where the authors built a deceptive dataset using Internet news and performed machine learning experiments using a bag-of-words representation to train a classifier able to discriminate between deceptive and truthful cases.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The authors explored several strategies for identifying deceptive clues, such as utterance length, LIWC features, lemmas and part of speech patterns. (Almela et al, 2012) studied the deception detection in Spanish text by using SVM classifiers and linguistic categories, obtained from the Spanish version of the LIWC dictionary. A study on Chinese deception is presented in (Zhang et al, 2009), where the authors built a deceptive dataset using Internet news and performed machine learning experiments using a bag-of-words representation to train a classifier able to discriminate between deceptive and truthful cases.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Previous work on deception detection [16,17,18] has relied on the use of the Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (LIWC) 6 lexicon, which was originally designed to model psycholinguistic information from verbal communication based on specific word usages.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Apart from the statistical models, there are linguistic models which represents texts written in natural language as the percentage of psychological-relevant words what convey what the text say, and how it says it. LIWC [20] is a tool widely used for conducting opinion mining that has been applied to different domains, such as the financial domain [21], or deceit detection [22]. However, linguistic models present the drawback that they are highly language-dependant so it is difficult to adapt them to other languages.…”
Section: Opinion Miningmentioning
confidence: 99%