24,651 research outputs found
Sentiment Analysis Using Common-Sense and Context Information
Sentiment analysis research has been increasing tremendously in recent times due to the wide range of business and social applications. Sentiment analysis from unstructured natural language text has recently received considerable attention from the research community. In this paper, we propose a novel sentiment analysis model based on common-sense knowledge extracted from ConceptNet based ontology and context information. ConceptNet based ontology is used to determine the domain specific concepts which in turn produced the domain specific important features. Further, the polarities of the extracted concepts are determined using the contextual polarity lexicon which we developed by considering the context information of a word. Finally, semantic orientations of domain specific features of the review document are aggregated based on the importance of a feature with respect to the domain. The importance of the feature is determined by the depth of the feature in the ontology. Experimental results show the effectiveness of the proposed methods
Automatic domain ontology extraction for context-sensitive opinion mining
Automated analysis of the sentiments presented in online consumer feedbacks can facilitate both organizations’ business strategy development and individual consumers’ comparison shopping. Nevertheless, existing opinion mining methods either adopt a context-free sentiment classification approach or rely on a large number of manually annotated training examples to perform context sensitive sentiment classification. Guided by the design science research methodology, we illustrate the design, development, and evaluation of a novel fuzzy domain ontology based contextsensitive opinion mining system. Our novel ontology extraction mechanism underpinned by a variant of Kullback-Leibler divergence can automatically acquire contextual sentiment knowledge across various product domains to improve the sentiment analysis processes. Evaluated based on a benchmark dataset and real consumer reviews collected from Amazon.com, our system shows remarkable performance improvement over the context-free baseline
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OBOME - Ontology based opinion mining in UBIPOL
Ontologies have a special role in the UBIPOL system, they help to structure the policy related context, provide conceptualization for policy domain and use in the opinion mining process. In this work we presented a system called Ontology Based Opinion Mining Engine (OBOME) for analyzing a domain-specific opinion corpus by first assisting the user with the creation of a domain ontology from the corpus. We determined the polarity of opinion on the various domain aspects. In the former step, the policy domain aspect has are identified (namely which policy category is represented by the concept). This identification is supported by the policy modelling ontology, which describe the most important policy – related classes and structure. Then the most informative documents from the corpus are extracted and asked the user to create a set of aspects and related keywords using these documents. In the latter step, we used the corpus specific ontology to model the domain and extracted aspect-polarity associations using grammatical dependencies between words. Later, summarized results are shown to the user to analyze and store. Finally, in an offline process policy modeling ontology is updated
A linguistically-driven methodology for detecting impending and unfolding emergencies from social media messages
Natural disasters have demonstrated the crucial role of social media before, during and after emergencies
(Haddow & Haddow 2013). Within our EU project Sland \ub4 ail, we aim to ethically improve \ub4
the use of social media in enhancing the response of disaster-related agen-cies. To this end, we
have collected corpora of social and formal media to study newsroom communication of emergency
management organisations in English and Italian. Currently, emergency management agencies
in English-speaking countries use social media in different measure and different degrees,
whereas Italian National Protezione Civile only uses Twitter at the moment. Our method is developed
with a view to identifying communicative strategies and detecting sentiment in order to
distinguish warnings from actual disasters and major from minor disasters. Our linguistic analysis
uses humans to classify alert/warning messages or emer-gency response and mitigation ones based
on the terminology used and the sentiment expressed. Results of linguistic analysis are then used
to train an application by tagging messages and detecting disaster- and/or emergency-related terminology
and emotive language to simulate human rating and forward information to an emergency
management system
Diving Deep into Sentiment: Understanding Fine-tuned CNNs for Visual Sentiment Prediction
Visual media are powerful means of expressing emotions and sentiments. The
constant generation of new content in social networks highlights the need of
automated visual sentiment analysis tools. While Convolutional Neural Networks
(CNNs) have established a new state-of-the-art in several vision problems,
their application to the task of sentiment analysis is mostly unexplored and
there are few studies regarding how to design CNNs for this purpose. In this
work, we study the suitability of fine-tuning a CNN for visual sentiment
prediction as well as explore performance boosting techniques within this deep
learning setting. Finally, we provide a deep-dive analysis into a benchmark,
state-of-the-art network architecture to gain insight about how to design
patterns for CNNs on the task of visual sentiment prediction.Comment: Preprint of the paper accepted at the 1st Workshop on Affect and
Sentiment in Multimedia (ASM), in ACM MultiMedia 2015. Brisbane, Australi
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