Datasets:
annotations_creators:
- expert-generated
language_creators:
- found
languages:
- en
licenses:
- cc-by-nc-sa-3-0
multilinguality:
- monolingual
size_categories:
- 1K<n<10K
source_datasets:
- original
task_categories:
- text-classification
task_ids:
- multi-class-classification
- sentiment-classification
Dataset Card for financial_phrasebank
Table of Contents
- Dataset Description
- Dataset Structure
- Dataset Creation
- Considerations for Using the Data
- Additional Information
Dataset Description
- Homepage: Kaggle ResearchGate
- Repository:
- Paper: Arxiv
- Leaderboard: Kaggle PapersWithCode =
- Point of Contact:
Dataset Summary
Polar sentiment dataset of sentences from financial news. The dataset consists of 4840 sentences from English language financial news categorised by sentiment. The dataset is divided by agreement rate of 5-8 annotators.
Supported Tasks and Leaderboards
Sentiment Classification
Languages
English
Dataset Structure
Data Instances
{ "sentence": "Pharmaceuticals group Orion Corp reported a fall in its third-quarter earnings that were hit by larger expenditures on R&D and marketing .",
"label": "negative"
}
Data Fields
- sentence: a tokenized line from the dataset
- label: a label corresponding to the class as a string: 'positive', 'negative' or 'neutral'
Data Splits
There's no train/validation/test split.
However the dataset is available in four possible configurations depending on the percentage of agreement of annotators:
sentences_50agree
; Number of instances with >=50% annotator agreement: 4846
sentences_66agree
: Number of instances with >=66% annotator agreement: 4217
sentences_75agree
: Number of instances with >=75% annotator agreement: 3453
sentences_allagree
: Number of instances with 100% annotator agreement: 2264
Dataset Creation
Curation Rationale
The key arguments for the low utilization of statistical techniques in financial sentiment analysis have been the difficulty of implementation for practical applications and the lack of high quality training data for building such models. Especially in the case of finance and economic texts, annotated collections are a scarce resource and many are reserved for proprietary use only. To resolve the missing training data problem, we present a collection of ∼ 5000 sentences to establish human-annotated standards for benchmarking alternative modeling techniques.
The objective of the phrase level annotation task was to classify each example sentence into a positive, negative or neutral category by considering only the information explicitly available in the given sentence. Since the study is focused only on financial and economic domains, the annotators were asked to consider the sentences from the view point of an investor only; i.e. whether the news may have positive, negative or neutral influence on the stock price. As a result, sentences which have a sentiment that is not relevant from an economic or financial perspective are considered neutral.
Source Data
Initial Data Collection and Normalization
The corpus used in this paper is made out of English news on all listed companies in OMX Helsinki. The news has been downloaded from the LexisNexis database using an automated web scraper. Out of this news database, a random subset of 10,000 articles was selected to obtain good coverage across small and large companies, companies in different industries, as well as different news sources. Following the approach taken by Maks and Vossen (2010), we excluded all sentences which did not contain any of the lexicon entities. This reduced the overall sample to 53,400 sentences, where each has at least one or more recognized lexicon entity. The sentences were then classified according to the types of entity sequences detected. Finally, a random sample of ∼5000 sentences was chosen to represent the overall news database.
Who are the source language producers?
The source data was written by various financial journalists.
Annotations
Annotation process
This release of the financial phrase bank covers a collection of 4840 sentences. The selected collection of phrases was annotated by 16 people with adequate background knowledge on financial markets.
Given the large number of overlapping annotations (5 to 8 annotations per sentence), there are several ways to define a majority vote based gold standard. To provide an objective comparison, we have formed 4 alternative reference datasets based on the strength of majority agreement:
Who are the annotators?
Three of the annotators were researchers and the remaining 13 annotators were master's students at Aalto University School of Business with majors primarily in finance, accounting, and economics.
Personal and Sensitive Information
[More Information Needed]
Considerations for Using the Data
Social Impact of Dataset
[More Information Needed]
Discussion of Biases
All annotators were from the same institution and so interannotator agreement should be understood with this taken into account.
Other Known Limitations
[More Information Needed]
Additional Information
Dataset Curators
[More Information Needed]
Licensing Information
License: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC-BY)
Citation Information
@article{Malo2014GoodDO,
title={Good debt or bad debt: Detecting semantic orientations in economic texts},
author={P. Malo and A. Sinha and P. Korhonen and J. Wallenius and P. Takala},
journal={Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology},
year={2014},
volume={65}
}
Contributions
Thanks to @frankier for adding this dataset.