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Identification of Opinion Spammers using Reviewer Reputation and Clustering Analysis
Author(s) -
Minjuan Zhong,
Liang Tan,
Xilong Qu
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
international journal of computers communications and control
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.422
H-Index - 33
eISSN - 1841-9844
pISSN - 1841-9836
DOI - 10.15837/ijccc.2019.6.3704
Subject(s) - reputation , computer science , cluster analysis , identification (biology) , purchasing , quality (philosophy) , heuristic , data mining , artificial intelligence , machine learning , marketing , business , social science , philosophy , botany , epistemology , sociology , biology
Online reviews have increasingly become a very important resource before making a purchasing decisions. Unfortunately, malicious sellers try to game the system by hiring a person or team (which is called spammers) to fabricate fake reviews to improve their reputation.Existing methods mainly take the problem as a general binary classification or focus on some heuristic rules. However, supervised learning methods relies heavily on a large number of labeled examples of deceptive and truthful opinions by domain experts, and most of features mentioned in the heuristic strategy ignore the characteristic of the group organization among spammers. In this paper, an effective method of identifying opinion spammers is proposed. Firstly, suspected spammers are detected by means of unsupervised learning based on reviewer’s reputation. We believe that the reviewer’s reputation has a direct relation with the quality of reviews. Generally, review written by user with lower reputation, shows lower quality and higher possibility to be fake. Therefore, the model assigns reputation score to each reviewer wherein the content based factors and activeness of reviewers are employed efficiently. On basis of all suspected spammers, k-center clustering algorithm is performed to further spot the spammers based on the observation of burst of review release time. Experimental results on Amazon’s dataset are encouraging and indicate that our approach poses high accuracy and recall, and good performance is achieved.

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