20 research outputs found

    Resource Creation and Evaluation for Multilingual Sentiment Analysis in Social Media Texts

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    Sentiment analysis (SA) regards the classification of texts according to the polarity of the opinions they express. SA systems are highly relevant to many real-world applications (e.g. marketing, eGovernance, business intelligence, behavioral sciences) and also to many tasks in Natural Language Processing (NLP) – information extraction, question answering, textual entailment, to name just a few. The importance of this field has been proven by the high number of approaches proposed in research, as well as by the interest that it raised from other disciplines and the applications that were created using its technology. In our case, the primary focus is to use sentiment analysis in the context of media monitoring, to enable tracking of global reactions to events. The main challenge that we face is that tweets are written in different languages and an unbiased system should be able to deal with all of them, in order to process all (possible) available data. Unfortunately, although many linguistic resources exist for processing texts written in English, for many other languages data and tools are scarce. Following our initial efforts described in (Balahur and Turchi, 2013), in this article we extend our study on the possibility to implement a multilingual system that is able to a) classify sentiment expressed in tweets in various languages using training data obtained through machine translation; b) to verify the extent to which the quality of the translations influences the sentiment classification performance, in this case, of highly informal texts; and c) to improve multilingual sentiment classification using small amounts of data annotated in the target language. To this aim, varying sizes of target language data are tested. The languages we explore are: Arabic, Turkish, Russian, Italian, Spanish, German and French.JRC.G.2-Global security and crisis managemen

    A systematic study on predicting depression using text analytics

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    Social Networking Sites (SNS) provides online communication among groups but somehow it is affecting the status of mental health. For adolescents with limited social media friends and using internet for communication purposes predicted less depression, whereas  non-communication desire reveals more depression and anxiety disorder. Social media posts and comments provide a rich source of text data for academic research. In this paper, we have discussed various text analytical approaches to predict depression among users through the sharing of online ideas over such websites. This paper presents a  comprehensive review for predicting depression disorder by various text analytics approaches. This paper also presents the summary of results obtained by some researchers available in literature to predict MajorDepressive Disorder (MDD). In future research, enable self-monitoring of health status of each individuals which may help to increase well-being of an identity.Keywords: Social Networking Sites; Sentiment Analysis; Machine Learning; Support Vector Machine

    A Check On Annotation In Sentiment Research

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    The research literature on sentiment analysis methodologies has exponentially grown in recent years. In any research area, where new concepts and techniques are constantly introduced, it is, therefore, of interest to analyze the latest trends in this literature. In particular, we have chosen to primarily focus on the literature of the last five years, on annotation methodologies, including frequently used datasets and from which they were obtained. Based on the survey, it appears that researchers do more manual annotation in the formation of sentiment corpus. As for the dataset, there are still many uses of English language taken from social media such as Twitter. In this area of research, there are still many that need to be explored, such as the use of semi-automatic annotation method that is still very rarely used by researchers. Also, less popular languages, such as Malay, Korean, Japanese, and so on, still require corpus for sentiment analysis research

    The Impact of Sentiment Analysis Output on Decision Outcomes: An Empirical Evaluation

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    User-generated online content serves as a source of product- and service-related information that reduces the uncertainty in consumer decision making, yet the abundance of such content makes it prohibitively costly to use all relevant information. Dealing with this (big data) problem requires a consumer to decide what subset of information to focus on. Peer-generated star ratings are excellent tools for one to decide what subset of information to focus on as they indicate a review’s “tone”. However, star ratings are not available for all user-generated content and not detailed enough in other cases. Sentiment analysis, a text-analytic technique that automatically detects the polarity of text, provides sentiment scores that are comparable to, and potentially more refined than, star ratings. Despite its popularity as an active topic in analytics research, sentiment analysis outcomes have not been evaluated through rigorous user studies. We fill that gap by investigating the impact of sentiment scores on purchase decisions through a controlled experiment using 100 participants. The results suggest that, consistent with the effort-accuracy trade off and effort-minimization concepts, sentiment scores on review documents improve the efficiency (speed) of purchase decisions without significantly affecting decision effectiveness (confidence)
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