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Exploring Cultural Nuances in Emotion Perception Across 15 African Languages

Published: March 25, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2503.19642v1

By: Ibrahim Said Ahmad , Shiran Dudy , Tadesse Destaw Belay and more

Potential Business Impact:

Helps computers understand feelings in African languages.

Business Areas:
Natural Language Processing Artificial Intelligence, Data and Analytics, Software

Understanding how emotions are expressed across languages is vital for building culturally-aware and inclusive NLP systems. However, emotion expression in African languages is understudied, limiting the development of effective emotion detection tools in these languages. In this work, we present a cross-linguistic analysis of emotion expression in 15 African languages. We examine four key dimensions of emotion representation: text length, sentiment polarity, emotion co-occurrence, and intensity variations. Our findings reveal diverse language-specific patterns in emotional expression -- with Somali texts typically longer, while others like IsiZulu and Algerian Arabic show more concise emotional expression. We observe a higher prevalence of negative sentiment in several Nigerian languages compared to lower negativity in languages like IsiXhosa. Further, emotion co-occurrence analysis demonstrates strong cross-linguistic associations between specific emotion pairs (anger-disgust, sadness-fear), suggesting universal psychological connections. Intensity distributions show multimodal patterns with significant variations between language families; Bantu languages display similar yet distinct profiles, while Afroasiatic languages and Nigerian Pidgin demonstrate wider intensity ranges. These findings highlight the need for language-specific approaches to emotion detection while identifying opportunities for transfer learning across related languages.

Country of Origin
🇳🇬 Nigeria

Page Count
9 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Computation and Language