A Text is a Text is a Text
I have a bachelor's degree in Literature, and at college I spent most of my time thinking, writing, and talking about texts. About what a text is says, what a text means, and what a text is. When I decided to make the switch from studying literature to Computer Science a year and a half ago, I would have never thought I would be fortunate enough to still be thinking about those very topics.
Here at Scripted, I work on automatically grouping similar texts or documents together---in Machine Learning terms, I'm talking about document clustering and classification. There are a variety of ways to accomplish this, and the 'best' algorithm for this goal isn't always a clear-cut choice, as it can be largely dependent on the reasons you're trying to group documents together.
One preprocessing requirement most of these algorithms have in common is the need to reduce a document to a 'bag of words'. That is, these algorithms aren't concerned with word order. They just look at how many times each word appears in a certain text, or we can take the bag of words model and then produce a sometimes more telling representation like tf*idf vectors. To get an idea of what this looks like, here are the top terms of this very blog post in bag of words form (term frequency or tf) and tf*idf form (term frequency multiplied by inverse document frequency) when considered against the entire Scripted corpus:
Term Frequency: tf*idf:
text document literature computer algorithm grouping vector time term clustering |
15 10 5 5 5 4 4 4 4 6 |
grouping vector literature corpus classifying startling arc grouped extracting algorithm |
0.7349142790721426 0.4409485674432856 0.2755928546520534 0.2204742837216428 0.1837285697680356 0.1377964273260267 0.1102371418608214 0.0918642848840178 0.0787408156148724 0.06263473969364851 |
Using representations like these can be incredibly effective for grouping documents together and, when clustering, they can be very useful for discovering some central topics the documents in a corpus are about. For example, here are few of the topics businesses have hired our writers to write about:
heart blood artery pressure high vessel |
beer ale brewing flavor hop yeast |
data cloud quality information storage system |
beach resort luxury island hotel vacation |
This type of grouping is useful to us as a kind of finger on the pulse of our writers, so that we can see who writes about what in more detail. But one thing about the bag of words model bothers me, perhaps irrationally so--it's a simplification that changes the very form of a document. Once converted, a text is no longer a text, but a vector. It's a simplification that's necessary for this type of grouping, but both the literature student and the computer scientist in me are saddened every time I convert a document to a vector. The literature student part of me is saddened because I know I am losing important features of the text like tone, style, narrative arc, and meaning. The computer scientist part of me is saddened for the exact same reason--because these features are ultimately information. Indeed, they are almost the entire reason we care about these documents at all.
This simplification is necessary, at least for the time being, because computers are still ineffective at extracting and handling these features. That is to say: computers are not good readers (and even worse writers). Advancements are always being made, but as of now it's necessary to break a text down into a bag of words so a clustering or classifying algorithm can process it. And I can't deny that there is something pleasantly surprising about the fact that the simplification of a text into a vector can be incredibly useful. My literature student's inclination is to resist anything but a holistic approach when analysing a text, but it's always startling to see how the hyper-specialized nature of an algorithm can produce fascinating results.