scholarly journals Sentiment Analysis of Novel Review Using Long Short-Term Memory Method

Author(s):  
Muh Amin Nurrohmat ◽  
Azhari SN

The rapid development of the internet and social media and a large amount of text data has become an important research subject in obtaining information from the text data. In recent years, there has been an increase in research on sentiment analysis in the review text to determine the polarity of opinion on social media. However, there are still few studies that apply the deep learning method, namely Long Short-Term Memory for sentiment analysis in Indonesian texts.This study aims to classify Indonesian novel novels based on positive, neutral and negative sentiments using the Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) method. The dataset used is a review of Indonesian language novels taken from the goodreads.com site. In the testing process, the LSTM method will be compared with the Naïve Bayes method based on the calculation of the values of accuracy, precision, recall, f-measure.Based on the test results show that the Long Short-Term Memory method has better accuracy results than the Naïve Bayes method with an accuracy value of 72.85%, 73% precision, 72% recall, and 72% f-measure compared to the results of the Naïve Bayes method accuracy with accuracy value of 67.88%, precision 69%, recall 68%, and f-measure 68%.

Author(s):  
Ivan Nathaniel Husada ◽  
Hapnes Toba

Nowadays internet access is getting easier to get. Because of the ease of access to the internet, almost all internet users have social media. Social media is widely used by users to call out their opinions or even to make complaints about a matter and also discuss a topic with other social media users. From many existing social media, one that is popularly used for that activity is Twitter. Sentiment analysis on Twitter has become possible because of the activities of these Twitter users. In this research, the authors explore sentiment analysis with bag-of-words and Term Frequency Inverse Document Frequency (TF-IDF) features extraction based on tweets from Indonesian Twitter users. The data obtained is in imbalanced condition, so that it requires a method to overcome them. The method for overcoming imbalanced dataset uses a resampling approach which combines over and under sampling strategies. The results of sentiment analysis accuracies with Naïve Bayes and neural networks before and after input data resampling are also compared. Naïve Bayes methods that will be used are Multinomial Naïve Bayes and Complement Naïve Bayes, while the Neural Network architecture that will be used as a comparison are Recurrent Neural Networks, Long Short-Term Memory, Gated Recurrent Units, Convolutional Neural Networks, and a combination of Convolutional Neural Networks and Long Short-Term Memory. Our experiments show the following harmonic scores (F1) of the sentiment analysis models: the Multinomial Naïve Bayes F1 score is 55.48, Complement Naïve Bayes is 51.33, Recurrent Neural Network  is 75.70, Long Short-Term Memory is 78.36, Gated Recurrent Unit is 77.96, Convolutional Neural Network is 76.12, and finally the combination of Convolutional Neural Networks and Long Short-Term Memory achieves 81.14.


2021 ◽  
pp. 016555152110065
Author(s):  
Rahma Alahmary ◽  
Hmood Al-Dossari

Sentiment analysis (SA) aims to extract users’ opinions automatically from their posts and comments. Almost all prior works have used machine learning algorithms. Recently, SA research has shown promising performance in using the deep learning approach. However, deep learning is greedy and requires large datasets to learn, so it takes more time for data annotation. In this research, we proposed a semiautomatic approach using Naïve Bayes (NB) to annotate a new dataset in order to reduce the human effort and time spent on the annotation process. We created a dataset for the purpose of training and testing the classifier by collecting Saudi dialect tweets. The dataset produced from the semiautomatic model was then used to train and test deep learning classifiers to perform Saudi dialect SA. The accuracy achieved by the NB classifier was 83%. The trained semiautomatic model was used to annotate the new dataset before it was fed into the deep learning classifiers. The three deep learning classifiers tested in this research were convolutional neural network (CNN), long short-term memory (LSTM) and bidirectional long short-term memory (Bi-LSTM). Support vector machine (SVM) was used as the baseline for comparison. Overall, the performance of the deep learning classifiers exceeded that of SVM. The results showed that CNN reported the highest performance. On one hand, the performance of Bi-LSTM was higher than that of LSTM and SVM, and, on the other hand, the performance of LSTM was higher than that of SVM. The proposed semiautomatic annotation approach is usable and promising to increase speed and save time and effort in the annotation process.


2020 ◽  
Vol 23 (65) ◽  
pp. 124-135
Author(s):  
Imane Guellil ◽  
Marcelo Mendoza ◽  
Faical Azouaou

This paper presents an analytic study showing that it is entirely possible to analyze the sentiment of an Arabic dialect without constructing any resources. The idea of this work is to use the resources dedicated to a given dialect \textit{X} for analyzing the sentiment of another dialect \textit{Y}. The unique condition is to have \textit{X} and \textit{Y} in the same category of dialects. We apply this idea on Algerian dialect, which is a Maghrebi Arabic dialect that suffers from limited available tools and other handling resources required for automatic sentiment analysis. To do this analysis, we rely on Maghrebi dialect resources and two manually annotated sentiment corpus for respectively Tunisian and Moroccan dialect. We also use a large corpus for Maghrebi dialect. We use a state-of-the-art system and propose a new deep learning architecture for automatically classify the sentiment of Arabic dialect (Algerian dialect). Experimental results show that F1-score is up to 83% and it is achieved by Multilayer Perceptron (MLP) with Tunisian corpus and with Long short-term memory (LSTM) with the combination of Tunisian and Moroccan. An improvement of 15% compared to its closest competitor was observed through this study. Ongoing work is aimed at manually constructing an annotated sentiment corpus for Algerian dialect and comparing the results


Author(s):  
Ms. Anjima K. S

Abstract: The stock market is a difficult area to anticipate since it is influenced by a variety of variables at the same time. The stock exchange is where equities are exchanged, transferred, and circulated. This research proposes a hybrid algorithm that predicts a stock's next day closing prices using sentiment analysis and Long Short Term Memory. The LSTM model seems to be quite popular in time-series forecasting, which is why it was selected for this project. Our proposed methodology makes use of the temporal association between public opinion and stock prices. Part-of-speech tagging is used to do sentiment analysis, and Long Short Term Memory is utilized to predict the stock's next day closing price. When these two factors are combined, we get a good picture of the stock's future. In this project, two main datasets have been used: HCLTECH company stock data and the news related to each stock of the HCL company for each day. The project is implemented by using the python programming language. The python programming language has been used to execute the project. This also incorporates machine learning along with public feedback. Sentiment analysis enables us to evaluate a diversity of political and economic factors, which have a significant impact on the stock market. Keywords: LSTM, sentiment analysis, RNN, Back propagation neural network.


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