scholarly journals Predictive Analysis using Convolution Network on Sentiment Analysis of Text Classification using Machine Learning

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 318-322
Author(s):  
Vanitha kakollu, Et. al.

Today we have large amounts of textual data to be processed and the procedure involved in classifying text is called natural language processing. The basic goal is to identify whether the text is positive or negative. This process is also called as opinion mining. In this paper, we consider three different data sets and perform sentiment analysis to find the test accuracy. We have three different cases- 1. If the text contains more positive data than negative data then the overall result leans towards positive. 2. If the text contains more negative data than positive data then the overall result leans towards negative. 3. In the final case the number or positive and negative data is nearly equal then we have a neutral output. For sentiment analysis we have several steps like term extraction, feature selection, sentiment classification etc. In this paper the key point of focus is on sentiment analysis by comparing the machine learning approach and lexicon-based approach and their respective accuracy loss graphs.

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 313-317
Author(s):  
Vanitha kakollu, Et. al.

Today we have large amounts of textual data to be processed and the procedure involved in classifying text is called natural language processing. The basic goal is to identify whether the text is positive or negative. This process is also called as opinion mining. In this paper, we consider three different data sets and perform sentiment analysis to find the test accuracy. We have three different cases- 1. If the text contains more positive data than negative data then the overall result leans towards positive. 2. If the text contains more negative data than positive data then the overall result leans towards negative. 3. In the final case the number or positive and negative data is nearly equal then we have a neutral output. For sentiment analysis we have several steps like term extraction, feature selection, sentiment classification etc. In this paper the key point of focus is on sentiment analysis by comparing the machine learning approach and lexicon-based approach and their respective accuracy loss graphs.


IJOSTHE ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 10
Author(s):  
Rajul Rai ◽  
Pradeep Mewada

With development of Internet and Natural Language processing, use of regional languages is also grown for communication. Sentiment analysis is natural language processing task that extracts useful information from various data forms such as reviews and categorize them on basis of polarity. One of the sub-domain of opinion mining is sentiment analysis which is basically focused on the extraction of emotions and opinions of the people towards a particular topic from textual data. In this paper, sentiment analysis is performed on IMDB movie review database. We examine the sentiment expression to classify the polarity of the movie review on a scale of negative to positive and perform feature extraction and ranking and use these features to train our multilevel classifier to classify the movie review into its correct label. In this paper classification of movie reviews into positive and negative classes with the help of machine learning. Proposed approach using classification techniques has the best accuracy of about 99%.


Author(s):  
Amit Purohit

Sentiment analysis is defined as the process of mining of data, view, review or sentence to Predict the emotion of the sentence through natural language processing (NLP) or Machine Learning Techniques. The sentiment analysis involve classification of text into three phase “Positive”, “Negative” or “Neutral”. The process of finding user Opinion about the topic or Product or problem is called as opinion mining. Analyzing the emotions from the extracted Opinions are defined as Sentiment Analysis. The goal of opinion mining and Sentiment Analysis is to make computer able to recognize and express emotion. Using social media, E-commerce website, movies reviews such as Face book, twitter, Amazon, Flipkart etc. user share their views, feelings in a convenient way. Sentiment analysis in a machine learning approach in which machines classify and analyze the human’s sentiments, emotions, opinions etc. about the products. Out of the various classification models, Naïve Bayes, Support Vector Machine (SVM) and Decision Tree are used maximum times for the product analysis. The proposed approach will do better result as compare to other machine learning techniques.


Sentiment Analysis is individuals' opinions and feedbacks study towards a substance, which can be items, services, movies, people or events. The opinions are mostly expressed as remarks or reviews. With the social network, gatherings and websites, these reviews rose as a significant factor for the client’s decision to buy anything or not. These days, a vast scalable computing environment provides us with very sophisticated way of carrying out various data-intensive natural language processing (NLP) and machine-learning tasks to examine these reviews. One such example is text classification, a compelling method for predicting the clients' sentiment. In this paper, we attempt to center our work of sentiment analysis on movie review database. We look at the sentiment expression to order the extremity of the movie reviews on a size of 0(highly disliked) to 4(highly preferred) and perform feature extraction and ranking and utilize these features to prepare our multilabel classifier to group the movie review into its right rating. This paper incorporates sentiment analysis utilizing feature-based opinion mining and managed machine learning. The principle center is to decide the extremity of reviews utilizing nouns, verbs, and adjectives as opinion words. In addition, a comparative study on different classification approaches has been performed to determine the most appropriate classifier to suit our concern problem space. In our study, we utilized six distinctive machine learning algorithms – Naïve Bayes, Logistic Regression, SVM (Support Vector Machine), RF (Random Forest) KNN (K nearest neighbors) and SoftMax Regression.


Author(s):  
Mirza Murtaza

Abstract Sentiment analysis of text can be performed using machine learning and natural language processing methods. However, there is no single tool or method that is effective in all cases. The objective of this research project is to determine the effectiveness of neural network-based architecture to perform sentiment analysis of customer comments and reviews, such as the ones on Amazon site. A typical sentiment analysis process involves text preparation (of acquired content), sentiment detection, sentiment classification and analysis of results. In this research, the objective is to a) identify the best approach for text preparation in a given application (text filtering approach to remove errors in data), and, most importantly, b) what is the best machine learning (feed forward neural nets, convolutional neural nets, Long Short-Term Memory networks) approach that provides best classification accuracy. In this research, a set of three thousand two hundred reviews of food related products were used to train and experiment with a neural network-based sentiment analysis system. The neural network implementation of six different models provided close to one-hundred percent accuracy of test data, and a decent test accuracy in mid-80%. The results of the research would be useful to businesses in evaluating customer preferences for products or services.  


Terminology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ayla Rigouts Terryn ◽  
Véronique Hoste ◽  
Els Lefever

Abstract Automatic term extraction (ATE) is an important task within natural language processing, both separately, and as a preprocessing step for other tasks. In recent years, research has moved far beyond the traditional hybrid approach where candidate terms are extracted based on part-of-speech patterns and filtered and sorted with statistical termhood and unithood measures. While there has been an explosion of different types of features and algorithms, including machine learning methodologies, some of the fundamental problems remain unsolved, such as the ambiguous nature of the concept “term”. This has been a hurdle in the creation of data for ATE, meaning that datasets for both training and testing are scarce, and system evaluations are often limited and rarely cover multiple languages and domains. The ACTER Annotated Corpora for Term Extraction Research contain manual term annotations in four domains and three languages and have been used to investigate a supervised machine learning approach for ATE, using a binary random forest classifier with multiple types of features. The resulting system (HAMLET Hybrid Adaptable Machine Learning approach to Extract Terminology) provides detailed insights into its strengths and weaknesses. It highlights a certain unpredictability as an important drawback of machine learning methodologies, but also shows how the system appears to have learnt a robust definition of terms, producing results that are state-of-the-art, and contain few errors that are not (part of) terms in any way. Both the amount and the relevance of the training data have a substantial effect on results, and by varying the training data, it appears to be possible to adapt the system to various desired outputs, e.g., different types of terms. While certain issues remain difficult – such as the extraction of rare terms and multiword terms – this study shows how supervised machine learning is a promising methodology for ATE.


Author(s):  
Ganesh K. Shinde

Abstract: Sentiment Analysis has improvement in online shopping platforms, scientific surveys from political polls, business intelligence, etc. In this we trying to analyse the twitter posts about Hashtag like #MakeinIndia using Machine Learning approach. By doing opinion mining in a specific area, it is possible to identify the effect of area information in sentiment analysis. We put forth a feature vector for classifying the tweets as positive, negative and neutral. After that applied machine learning algorithms namely: MaxEnt and SVM. We utilised Unigram, Bigram and Trigram Features to generate a set of features to train a linear MaxEnt and SVM classifiers. In the end we have measured the performance of classifier in terms of overall accuracy. Keywords: Sentiment analysis, support vector machine, maximum entropy, N-gram, Machine Learning


Author(s):  
Erick Omuya ◽  
George Okeyo ◽  
Michael Kimwele

Social media has been embraced by different people as a convenient and official medium of communication. People write messages and attach images and videos on Twitter, Facebook and other social media which they share. Social media therefore generates a lot of data that is rich in sentiments from these updates. Sentiment analysis has been used to determine opinions of clients, for instance, relating to a particular product or company. Knowledge based approach and Machine learning approach are among the strategies that have been used to analyze these sentiments. The performance of sentiment analysis is however distorted by noise, the curse of dimensionality, the data domains and size of data used for training and testing. This research aims at developing a model for sentiment analysis in which dimensionality reduction and the use of different parts of speech improves sentiment analysis performance. It uses natural language processing for filtering, storing and performing sentiment analysis on the data from social media. The model is tested using Naïve Bayes, Support Vector Machines and K-Nearest neighbor machine learning algorithms and its performance compared with that of two other Sentiment Analysis models. Experimental results show that the model improves sentiment analysis performance using machine learning techniques.


Author(s):  
Ayushi Mitra

Sentiment analysis or Opinion Mining or Emotion Artificial Intelligence is an on-going field which refers to the use of Natural Language Processing, analysis of text and is utilized to extract quantify and is used to study the emotional states from a given piece of information or text data set. It is an area that continues to be currently in progress in field of text mining. Sentiment analysis is utilized in many corporations for review of products, comments from social media and from a small amount of it is utilized to check whether or not the text is positive, negative or neutral. Throughout this research work we wish to adopt rule- based approaches which defines a set of rules and inputs like Classic Natural Language Processing techniques, stemming, tokenization, a region of speech tagging and parsing of machine learning for sentiment analysis which is going to be implemented by most advanced python language.


Author(s):  
Hendri Murfi ◽  
Furida Lusi Siagian ◽  
Yudi Satria

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to analyze topics as alternative features for sentiment analysis in Indonesian tweets. Design/methodology/approach Given Indonesian tweets, the processes of sentiment analysis start by extracting features from the tweets. The features are words or topics. The authors use non-negative matrix factorization to extract the topics and apply a support vector machine to classify the tweets into its sentiment class. Findings The authors analyze the accuracy using the two-class and three-class sentiment analysis data sets. Both data sets are about sentiments of candidates for Indonesian presidential election. The experiments show that the standard word features give better accuracies than the topics features for the two-class sentiment analysis. Moreover, the topic features can slightly improve the accuracy of the standard word features. The topic features can also improve the accuracy of the standard word features for the three-class sentiment analysis. Originality/value The standard textual data representation for sentiment analysis using machine learning is bag of word and its extensions mainly created by natural language processing. This paper applies topics as novel features for the machine learning-based sentiment analysis in Indonesian tweets.


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