Journal Article10.1016/J.KNOSYS.2014.05.005
Sentic patterns: dependency-based rules for concept-level sentiment analysis
368
TL;DR: The authors proposed a concept-level sentiment analysis that merges linguistics, common-sense computing, and machine learning for improving the accuracy of tasks such as polarity detection, by allowing sentiments to flow from concept to concept based on the dependency relation of the input sentence, in particular, achieving a better understanding of the contextual role of each concept within the sentence and, hence, obtaining a polarity detector that outperforms state-of-the-art statistical methods.
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Abstract: The Web is evolving through an era where the opinions of users are getting increasingly important and valuable. The distillation of knowledge from the huge amount of unstructured information on the Web can be a key factor for tasks such as social media marketing, branding, product positioning, and corporate reputation management. These online social data, however, remain hardly accessible to computers, as they are specifically meant for human consumption. The automatic analysis of online opinions involves a deep understanding of natural language text by machines, from which we are still very far. To this end, concept-level sentiment analysis aims to go beyond a mere word-level analysis of text and provide novel approaches to opinion mining and sentiment analysis that enable a more efficient passage from (unstructured) textual information to (structured) machine-processable data. A recent knowledge-based technology in this context is sentic computing, which relies on the ensemble application of common-sense computing and the psychology of emotions to infer the conceptual and affective information associated with natural language. Sentic computing, however, is limited by the richness of the knowledge base and by the fact that the bag-of-concepts model, despite more sophisticated than bag-of-words, misses out important discourse structure information that is key for properly detecting the polarity conveyed by natural language opinions. In this work, we introduce a novel paradigm to concept-level sentiment analysis that merges linguistics, common-sense computing, and machine learning for improving the accuracy of tasks such as polarity detection. By allowing sentiments to flow from concept to concept based on the dependency relation of the input sentence, in particular, we achieve a better understanding of the contextual role of each concept within the sentence and, hence, obtain a polarity detection engine that outperforms state-of-the-art statistical methods.
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References
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Recursive Deep Models for Semantic Compositionality Over a Sentiment Treebank
Richard Socher,Alex Perelygin,Jean Y. Wu,Jason Chuang,Christopher D. Manning,Andrew Y. Ng,Christopher Potts +6 more
- 01 Oct 2013
TL;DR: A Sentiment Treebank that includes fine grained sentiment labels for 215,154 phrases in the parse trees of 11,855 sentences and presents new challenges for sentiment compositionality, and introduces the Recursive Neural Tensor Network.
Extreme Learning Machine for Regression and Multiclass Classification
Guang-Bin Huang,Hongming Zhou,Xiaojian Ding,Rui Zhang +3 more
- 01 Apr 2012
TL;DR: ELM provides a unified learning platform with a widespread type of feature mappings and can be applied in regression and multiclass classification applications directly and in theory, ELM can approximate any target continuous function and classify any disjoint regions.
5.7K
An iteration method for the solution of the eigenvalue problem of linear differential and integral operators
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The Way We Think: Conceptual Blending And The Mind's Hidden Complexities
Gilles Fauconnier,Mark Turner +1 more
- 03 Apr 2002
TL;DR: Fauconnier and Turner as discussed by the authors show that conceptual blending is the root of the cognitively modern human mind, and that conceptual blends themselves are continually combined and reblended to create the rich mental fabric in which we live.
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