BERTAgent: The development of a novel tool to quantify agency in textual data.

Journal: Journal of experimental psychology. General
Published Date:

Abstract

Pertaining to goal orientation and achievement, agency is a fundamental aspect of human cognition and behavior. Accordingly, detecting and quantifying linguistic encoding of agency are critical for the analysis of human actions, interactions, and social dynamics. Available agency-quantifying computational tools rely on word-counting methods, which typically are insensitive to the semantic context in which the words are used and consequently prone to miscoding, for example, in case of polysemy. Additionally, some currently available tools do not take into account differences in the intensity and directionality of agency. In order to overcome these shortcomings, we present BERTAgent, a novel tool to quantify semantic agency in text. BERTAgent is a computational language model that utilizes the transformers architecture, a popular deep learning approach to natural language processing. BERTAgent was fine-tuned using textual data that were evaluated by human coders with respect to the level of conveyed agency. In four validation studies, BERTAgent exhibits improved convergent and discriminant validity compared to previous solutions. Additionally, the detailed description of BERTAgent's development procedure serves as a tutorial for the advancement of similar tools, providing a blueprint for leveraging the existing lexicographical data sets in conjunction with the deep learning techniques in order to detect and quantify other psychological constructs in textual data. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).

Authors

  • Jan Nikadon
    Department of Psychology, Center for Research on Social Relations, SWPS University.
  • Caterina Suitner
    Department of Developmental Psychology and Socialisation, University of Padova.
  • Tomaso Erseghe
    Department of Information Engineering, University of Padova.
  • Lejla Džanko
    Department of Psychology, Center for Research on Social Relations, SWPS University.
  • Magdalena Formanowicz
    Department of Psychology, Center for Research on Social Relations, SWPS University.