Sentiment Analysis of Democratic Presidential Primaries Debate Tweets Using Machine Learning Models

Author(s):  
Jennifer Andriot ◽  
Baekkwan Park ◽  
Peter Francia ◽  
Venkat N Gudivada
Author(s):  
Farrikh Alzami ◽  
Erika Devi Udayanti ◽  
Dwi Puji Prabowo ◽  
Rama Aria Megantara

Sentiment analysis in terms of polarity classification is very important in everyday life, with the existence of polarity, many people can find out whether the respected document has positive or negative sentiment so that it can help in choosing and making decisions. Sentiment analysis usually done manually. Therefore, an automatic sentiment analysis classification process is needed. However, it is rare to find studies that discuss extraction features and which learning models are suitable for unstructured sentiment analysis types with the Amazon food review case. This research explores some extraction features such as Word Bags, TF-IDF, Word2Vector, as well as a combination of TF-IDF and Word2Vector with several machine learning models such as Random Forest, SVM, KNN and Naïve Bayes to find out a combination of feature extraction and learning models that can help add variety to the analysis of polarity sentiments. By assisting with document preparation such as html tags and punctuation and special characters, using snowball stemming, TF-IDF results obtained with SVM are suitable for obtaining a polarity classification in unstructured sentiment analysis for the case of Amazon food review with a performance result of 87,3 percent.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (18) ◽  
pp. 8438
Author(s):  
Muhammad Mujahid ◽  
Ernesto Lee ◽  
Furqan Rustam ◽  
Patrick Bernard Washington ◽  
Saleem Ullah ◽  
...  

Amid the worldwide COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns, the closure of educational institutes leads to an unprecedented rise in online learning. For limiting the impact of COVID-19 and obstructing its widespread, educational institutions closed their campuses immediately and academic activities are moved to e-learning platforms. The effectiveness of e-learning is a critical concern for both students and parents, specifically in terms of its suitability to students and teachers and its technical feasibility with respect to different social scenarios. Such concerns must be reviewed from several aspects before e-learning can be adopted at such a larger scale. This study endeavors to investigate the effectiveness of e-learning by analyzing the sentiments of people about e-learning. Due to the rise of social media as an important mode of communication recently, people’s views can be found on platforms such as Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, etc. This study uses a Twitter dataset containing 17,155 tweets about e-learning. Machine learning and deep learning approaches have shown their suitability, capability, and potential for image processing, object detection, and natural language processing tasks and text analysis is no exception. Machine learning approaches have been largely used both for annotation and text and sentiment analysis. Keeping in view the adequacy and efficacy of machine learning models, this study adopts TextBlob, VADER (Valence Aware Dictionary for Sentiment Reasoning), and SentiWordNet to analyze the polarity and subjectivity score of tweets’ text. Furthermore, bearing in mind the fact that machine learning models display high classification accuracy, various machine learning models have been used for sentiment classification. Two feature extraction techniques, TF-IDF (Term Frequency-Inverse Document Frequency) and BoW (Bag of Words) have been used to effectively build and evaluate the models. All the models have been evaluated in terms of various important performance metrics such as accuracy, precision, recall, and F1 score. The results reveal that the random forest and support vector machine classifier achieve the highest accuracy of 0.95 when used with Bow features. Performance comparison is carried out for results of TextBlob, VADER, and SentiWordNet, as well as classification results of machine learning models and deep learning models such as CNN (Convolutional Neural Network), LSTM (Long Short Term Memory), CNN-LSTM, and Bi-LSTM (Bidirectional-LSTM). Additionally, topic modeling is performed to find the problems associated with e-learning which indicates that uncertainty of campus opening date, children’s disabilities to grasp online education, and lagging efficient networks for online education are the top three problems.


A sentiment analysis using SNS data can confirm various people’s thoughts. Thus an analysis using SNS can predict social problems and more accurately identify the complex causes of the problem. In addition, big data technology can identify SNS information that is generated in real time, allowing a wide range of people’s opinions to be understood without losing time. It can supplement traditional opinion surveys. The incumbent government mainly uses SNS to promote its policies. However, measures are needed to actively reflect SNS in the process of carrying out the policy. Therefore this paper developed a sentiment classifier that can identify public feelings on SNS about climate change. To that end, based on a dictionary formulated on the theme of climate change, we collected climate change SNS data for learning and tagged seven sentiments. Using training data, the sentiment classifier models were developed using machine learning models. The analysis showed that the Bi-LSTM model had the best performance than shallow models. It showed the highest accuracy (85.10%) in the seven sentiments classified, outperforming traditional machine learning (Naive Bayes and SVM) by approximately 34.53%p, and 7.14%p respectively. These findings substantiate the applicability of the proposed Bi-LSTM-based sentiment classifier to the analysis of sentiments relevant to diverse climate change issues.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2070 (1) ◽  
pp. 012079
Author(s):  
V Jagadishwari ◽  
A Indulekha ◽  
Kiran Raghu ◽  
P Harshini

Abstract Social Media is an arena in recent times for people to share their perspectives on a variety of topics. Most of the social interactions are through the Social Media. Though all the Online Social Networks allow users to express their views and opinions in many forms like audio, video, text etc, the most popular form of expression is text, Emoticons and Emojis. The work presented in this paper aims at detecting the sentiments expressed in the Social Media posts. The Machine Learning Models namely Bernoulli Bayes, Multinomial Bayes, Regression and SVM were implemented. All these models were trained and tested with Twitter Data sets. Users on Twitter express their opinions in the form of tweets with limited characters. Tweets also contain Emoticons and Emojis therefore Twitter data sets are best suited for the sentiment analysis. The effect of emoticons present in the tweet is also analyzed. The models are first trained only with the text and then they are trained with text and emoticon in the tweet. The performance of all the four models in both cases are tested and the results are presented in the paper.


Informatics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 79
Author(s):  
Enas Elgeldawi ◽  
Awny Sayed ◽  
Ahmed R. Galal ◽  
Alaa M. Zaki

Machine learning models are used today to solve problems within a broad span of disciplines. If the proper hyperparameter tuning of a machine learning classifier is performed, significantly higher accuracy can be obtained. In this paper, a comprehensive comparative analysis of various hyperparameter tuning techniques is performed; these are Grid Search, Random Search, Bayesian Optimization, Particle Swarm Optimization (PSO), and Genetic Algorithm (GA). They are used to optimize the accuracy of six machine learning algorithms, namely, Logistic Regression (LR), Ridge Classifier (RC), Support Vector Machine Classifier (SVC), Decision Tree (DT), Random Forest (RF), and Naive Bayes (NB) classifiers. To test the performance of each hyperparameter tuning technique, the machine learning models are used to solve an Arabic sentiment classification problem. Sentiment analysis is the process of detecting whether a text carries a positive, negative, or neutral sentiment. However, extracting such sentiment from a complex derivational morphology language such as Arabic has been always very challenging. The performance of all classifiers is tested using our constructed dataset both before and after the hyperparameter tuning process. A detailed analysis is described, along with the strengths and limitations of each hyperparameter tuning technique. The results show that the highest accuracy was given by SVC both before and after the hyperparameter tuning process, with a score of 95.6208 obtained when using Bayesian Optimization.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 3-6
Author(s):  
Eric Holloway

Imagination Sampling is the usage of a person as an oracle for generating or improving machine learning models. Previous work demonstrated a general system for using Imagination Sampling for obtaining multibox models. Here, the possibility of importing such models as the starting point for further automatic enhancement is explored.


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