Automated Fact-Checking for Assisting Human Fact-Checkers
Author | Nakov, Preslav |
Author | Corney, David |
Author | Hasanain, Maram |
Author | Alam, Firoj |
Author | Elsayed, Tamer |
Author | Barr�n-Cede�o, Alberto |
Author | Papotti, Paolo |
Author | Shaar, Shaden |
Author | da San Martino, Giovanni |
Available date | 2024-11-05T06:05:19Z |
Publication Date | 2021 |
Publication Name | IJCAI International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence |
Resource | Scopus |
Identifier | http://dx.doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2103.07769 |
ISSN | 10450823 |
Abstract | The reporting and the analysis of current events around the globe has expanded from professional, editor-lead journalism all the way to citizen journalism. Nowadays, politicians and other key players enjoy direct access to their audiences through social media, bypassing the filters of official cables or traditional media. However, the multiple advantages of free speech and direct communication are dimmed by the misuse of media to spread inaccurate or misleading claims. These phenomena have led to the modern incarnation of the fact-checker - a professional whose main aim is to examine claims using available evidence and to assess their veracity. Here, we survey the available intelligent technologies that can support the human expert in the different steps of her fact-checking endeavor. These include identifying claims worth fact-checking, detecting relevant previously fact-checked claims, retrieving relevant evidence to fact-check a claim, and actually verifying a claim. In each case, we pay attention to the challenges and the potential impact on real-world fact-checking. |
Sponsor | This work was made possible in part by grant# NPRP 7-1330-2-483 from the Qatar National Research Fund (a member of Qatar Foundation). Partial support also comes from a Google gift. This work is also part of the Tanbih mega-project, developed at the Qatar Computing Research Institute, HBKU, which aims to limit the impact of "fake news," propaganda, and media bias by making users aware of what they are reading. The statements made herein are solely the responsibility of the authors. |
Language | en |
Publisher | International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence |
Subject | Artificial intelligence Citizen journalism Current events Direct communications Free speech Human expert Intelligent technology Potential impacts Real-world Social media Speech communication |
Type | Conference Paper |
Pagination | 4551-4558 |
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