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Sentiment Analysis on Twitter Data by Using Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) and Long Short Term Memory (LSTM)

Gandhi, Usha Devi, Malarvizhi Kumar, Priyan ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6149-2705, Chandra Babu, Gokulnath and Karthick, Gayathri ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1228-7099 (2021) Sentiment Analysis on Twitter Data by Using Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) and Long Short Term Memory (LSTM). Wireless Personal Communications.

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Abstract

Twitter sentiment analysis is an automated process of analyzing the text data which determining the opinion or feeling of public tweets from the various fields. For example, in marketing field, political field huge number of tweets is posting with hash tags every moment via internet from one user to another user. This sentiment analysis is a challenging task for the researchers mainly to correct interpretation of context in which certain tweet words are difficult to evaluate what truly is negative and positive statement from the huge corpus of tweet data. This problem violates the integrity of the system and the user reliability can be significantly reduced. In this paper, we identify the each tweet word and we are assigning a meaning into it. The feature work is combined with tweet words, word2vec, stop words and integrated into the deep learning techniques of Convolution neural network model and Long short Term Memory, these algorithms can identify the pattern of stop word counts with its own strategy. Those two models are well trained and applied for IMDB dataset which contains 50,000 movie reviews. With huge amount of twitter data is processed for predicting the sentimental tweets for classification. With the proposed methodology, the samples are experimentally collected from the real-time environment can be discriminated well and the efficacy of the system is improved. The result of Deep Learning algorithms aims to rate the review tweets and also able to identify movie review with testing accuracy as 87.74% and 88.02%.

Item Type: Article
Status: Published
DOI: 10.1007/s11277-021-08580-3
School/Department: London Campus
URI: https://ray.yorksj.ac.uk/id/eprint/8173

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