18,973 research outputs found
Econometrics meets sentiment : an overview of methodology and applications
The advent of massive amounts of textual, audio, and visual data has spurred the development of econometric methodology to transform qualitative sentiment data into quantitative sentiment variables, and to use those variables in an econometric analysis of the relationships between sentiment and other variables. We survey this emerging research field and refer to it as sentometrics, which is a portmanteau of sentiment and econometrics. We provide a synthesis of the relevant methodological approaches, illustrate with empirical results, and discuss useful software
Scalable Privacy-Compliant Virality Prediction on Twitter
The digital town hall of Twitter becomes a preferred medium of communication
for individuals and organizations across the globe. Some of them reach
audiences of millions, while others struggle to get noticed. Given the impact
of social media, the question remains more relevant than ever: how to model the
dynamics of attention in Twitter. Researchers around the world turn to machine
learning to predict the most influential tweets and authors, navigating the
volume, velocity, and variety of social big data, with many compromises. In
this paper, we revisit content popularity prediction on Twitter. We argue that
strict alignment of data acquisition, storage and analysis algorithms is
necessary to avoid the common trade-offs between scalability, accuracy and
privacy compliance. We propose a new framework for the rapid acquisition of
large-scale datasets, high accuracy supervisory signal and multilanguage
sentiment prediction while respecting every privacy request applicable. We then
apply a novel gradient boosting framework to achieve state-of-the-art results
in virality ranking, already before including tweet's visual or propagation
features. Our Gradient Boosted Regression Tree is the first to offer
explainable, strong ranking performance on benchmark datasets. Since the
analysis focused on features available early, the model is immediately
applicable to incoming tweets in 18 languages.Comment: AffCon@AAAI-19 Best Paper Award; Presented at AAAI-19 W1: Affective
Content Analysi
Multimodal Content Analysis for Effective Advertisements on YouTube
The rapid advances in e-commerce and Web 2.0 technologies have greatly
increased the impact of commercial advertisements on the general public. As a
key enabling technology, a multitude of recommender systems exists which
analyzes user features and browsing patterns to recommend appealing
advertisements to users. In this work, we seek to study the characteristics or
attributes that characterize an effective advertisement and recommend a useful
set of features to aid the designing and production processes of commercial
advertisements. We analyze the temporal patterns from multimedia content of
advertisement videos including auditory, visual and textual components, and
study their individual roles and synergies in the success of an advertisement.
The objective of this work is then to measure the effectiveness of an
advertisement, and to recommend a useful set of features to advertisement
designers to make it more successful and approachable to users. Our proposed
framework employs the signal processing technique of cross modality feature
learning where data streams from different components are employed to train
separate neural network models and are then fused together to learn a shared
representation. Subsequently, a neural network model trained on this joint
feature embedding representation is utilized as a classifier to predict
advertisement effectiveness. We validate our approach using subjective ratings
from a dedicated user study, the sentiment strength of online viewer comments,
and a viewer opinion metric of the ratio of the Likes and Views received by
each advertisement from an online platform.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, ICDM 201
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