Hebrew Psychological Lexicons
Natalie Shapira, Dana Atzil-Slonim, Daniel Juravski, Moran Baruch, Dana Stolowicz-Melman, Adar Paz, Tal Alfi-Yogev, Roy Azoulay, Adi Singer, Maayan Revivo, Chen Dahbash, Limor Dayan, Tamar Naim, Lidar Gez, Boaz Yanai, Adva Maman, Adam Nadaf, Elinor Sarfati, Amna Baloum, Tal Naor, Ephraim Mosenkis, Badreya Sarsour, Jany Gelfand Morgenshteyn, Yarden Elias, Liat Braun, Moria Rubin, Matan Kenigsbuch, Noa Bergwerk, Noam Yosef, Sivan Peled, Coral Avigdor, Rahav Obercyger, Rachel Mann, Tomer Alper, Inbal Beka, Ori Shapira, Yoav Goldberg
Abstract
We introduce a large set of Hebrew lexicons pertaining to psychological aspects. These lexicons are useful for various psychology applications such as detecting emotional state, well being, relationship quality in conversation, identifying topics (e.g., family, work) and many more. We discuss the challenges in creating and validating lexicons in a new language, and highlight our methodological considerations in the data-driven lexicon construction process. Most of the lexicons are publicly available, which will facilitate further research on Hebrew clinical psychology text analysis. The lexicons were developed through data driven means, and verified by domain experts, clinical psychologists and psychology students, in a process of reconciliation with three judges. Development and verification relied on a dataset of a total of 872 psychotherapy session transcripts. We describe the construction process of each collection, the final resource and initial results of research studies employing this resource.- Anthology ID:
- 2021.clpsych-1.6
- Volume:
- Proceedings of the Seventh Workshop on Computational Linguistics and Clinical Psychology: Improving Access
- Month:
- June
- Year:
- 2021
- Address:
- Online
- Editors:
- Nazli Goharian, Philip Resnik, Andrew Yates, Molly Ireland, Kate Niederhoffer, Rebecca Resnik
- Venue:
- CLPsych
- SIG:
- Publisher:
- Association for Computational Linguistics
- Note:
- Pages:
- 55–69
- Language:
- URL:
- https://aclanthology.org/2021.clpsych-1.6
- DOI:
- 10.18653/v1/2021.clpsych-1.6
- Bibkey:
- Cite (ACL):
- Natalie Shapira, Dana Atzil-Slonim, Daniel Juravski, Moran Baruch, Dana Stolowicz-Melman, Adar Paz, Tal Alfi-Yogev, Roy Azoulay, Adi Singer, Maayan Revivo, Chen Dahbash, Limor Dayan, Tamar Naim, Lidar Gez, Boaz Yanai, Adva Maman, Adam Nadaf, Elinor Sarfati, Amna Baloum, et al.. 2021. Hebrew Psychological Lexicons. In Proceedings of the Seventh Workshop on Computational Linguistics and Clinical Psychology: Improving Access, pages 55–69, Online. Association for Computational Linguistics.
- Cite (Informal):
- Hebrew Psychological Lexicons (Shapira et al., CLPsych 2021)
- Copy Citation:
- PDF:
- https://aclanthology.org/2021.clpsych-1.6.pdf
- Code
- natalieshapira/hebrewpsychologicallexicons
Export citation
@inproceedings{shapira-etal-2021-hebrew, title = "{H}ebrew Psychological Lexicons", author = "Shapira, Natalie and Atzil-Slonim, Dana and Juravski, Daniel and Baruch, Moran and Stolowicz-Melman, Dana and Paz, Adar and Alfi-Yogev, Tal and Azoulay, Roy and Singer, Adi and Revivo, Maayan and Dahbash, Chen and Dayan, Limor and Naim, Tamar and Gez, Lidar and Yanai, Boaz and Maman, Adva and Nadaf, Adam and Sarfati, Elinor and Baloum, Amna and Naor, Tal and Mosenkis, Ephraim and Sarsour, Badreya and Gelfand Morgenshteyn, Jany and Elias, Yarden and Braun, Liat and Rubin, Moria and Kenigsbuch, Matan and Bergwerk, Noa and Yosef, Noam and Peled, Sivan and Avigdor, Coral and Obercyger, Rahav and Mann, Rachel and Alper, Tomer and Beka, Inbal and Shapira, Ori and Goldberg, Yoav", editor = "Goharian, Nazli and Resnik, Philip and Yates, Andrew and Ireland, Molly and Niederhoffer, Kate and Resnik, Rebecca", booktitle = "Proceedings of the Seventh Workshop on Computational Linguistics and Clinical Psychology: Improving Access", month = jun, year = "2021", address = "Online", publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics", url = "https://aclanthology.org/2021.clpsych-1.6", doi = "10.18653/v1/2021.clpsych-1.6", pages = "55--69", abstract = "We introduce a large set of Hebrew lexicons pertaining to psychological aspects. These lexicons are useful for various psychology applications such as detecting emotional state, well being, relationship quality in conversation, identifying topics (e.g., family, work) and many more. We discuss the challenges in creating and validating lexicons in a new language, and highlight our methodological considerations in the data-driven lexicon construction process. Most of the lexicons are publicly available, which will facilitate further research on Hebrew clinical psychology text analysis. The lexicons were developed through data driven means, and verified by domain experts, clinical psychologists and psychology students, in a process of reconciliation with three judges. Development and verification relied on a dataset of a total of 872 psychotherapy session transcripts. We describe the construction process of each collection, the final resource and initial results of research studies employing this resource.", }
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These lexicons are useful for various psychology applications such as detecting emotional state, well being, relationship quality in conversation, identifying topics (e.g., family, work) and many more. We discuss the challenges in creating and validating lexicons in a new language, and highlight our methodological considerations in the data-driven lexicon construction process. Most of the lexicons are publicly available, which will facilitate further research on Hebrew clinical psychology text analysis. The lexicons were developed through data driven means, and verified by domain experts, clinical psychologists and psychology students, in a process of reconciliation with three judges. Development and verification relied on a dataset of a total of 872 psychotherapy session transcripts. 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%0 Conference Proceedings %T Hebrew Psychological Lexicons %A Shapira, Natalie %A Atzil-Slonim, Dana %A Juravski, Daniel %A Baruch, Moran %A Stolowicz-Melman, Dana %A Paz, Adar %A Alfi-Yogev, Tal %A Azoulay, Roy %A Singer, Adi %A Revivo, Maayan %A Dahbash, Chen %A Dayan, Limor %A Naim, Tamar %A Gez, Lidar %A Yanai, Boaz %A Maman, Adva %A Nadaf, Adam %A Sarfati, Elinor %A Baloum, Amna %A Naor, Tal %A Mosenkis, Ephraim %A Sarsour, Badreya %A Gelfand Morgenshteyn, Jany %A Elias, Yarden %A Braun, Liat %A Rubin, Moria %A Kenigsbuch, Matan %A Bergwerk, Noa %A Yosef, Noam %A Peled, Sivan %A Avigdor, Coral %A Obercyger, Rahav %A Mann, Rachel %A Alper, Tomer %A Beka, Inbal %A Shapira, Ori %A Goldberg, Yoav %Y Goharian, Nazli %Y Resnik, Philip %Y Yates, Andrew %Y Ireland, Molly %Y Niederhoffer, Kate %Y Resnik, Rebecca %S Proceedings of the Seventh Workshop on Computational Linguistics and Clinical Psychology: Improving Access %D 2021 %8 June %I Association for Computational Linguistics %C Online %F shapira-etal-2021-hebrew %X We introduce a large set of Hebrew lexicons pertaining to psychological aspects. These lexicons are useful for various psychology applications such as detecting emotional state, well being, relationship quality in conversation, identifying topics (e.g., family, work) and many more. We discuss the challenges in creating and validating lexicons in a new language, and highlight our methodological considerations in the data-driven lexicon construction process. Most of the lexicons are publicly available, which will facilitate further research on Hebrew clinical psychology text analysis. The lexicons were developed through data driven means, and verified by domain experts, clinical psychologists and psychology students, in a process of reconciliation with three judges. Development and verification relied on a dataset of a total of 872 psychotherapy session transcripts. We describe the construction process of each collection, the final resource and initial results of research studies employing this resource. %R 10.18653/v1/2021.clpsych-1.6 %U https://aclanthology.org/2021.clpsych-1.6 %U https://doi.org/10.18653/v1/2021.clpsych-1.6 %P 55-69
Markdown (Informal)
[Hebrew Psychological Lexicons](https://aclanthology.org/2021.clpsych-1.6) (Shapira et al., CLPsych 2021)
- Hebrew Psychological Lexicons (Shapira et al., CLPsych 2021)
ACL
- Natalie Shapira, Dana Atzil-Slonim, Daniel Juravski, Moran Baruch, Dana Stolowicz-Melman, Adar Paz, Tal Alfi-Yogev, Roy Azoulay, Adi Singer, Maayan Revivo, Chen Dahbash, Limor Dayan, Tamar Naim, Lidar Gez, Boaz Yanai, Adva Maman, Adam Nadaf, Elinor Sarfati, Amna Baloum, et al.. 2021. Hebrew Psychological Lexicons. In Proceedings of the Seventh Workshop on Computational Linguistics and Clinical Psychology: Improving Access, pages 55–69, Online. Association for Computational Linguistics.