
Social Marketplace Monitoring and Sentiment Analysis
Author(s) -
P. Monisha,
R. Rubanya,
N. Malarvizhi
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
international journal of scientific research in computer science, engineering and information technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2456-3307
DOI - 10.32628/cseit1952136
Subject(s) - natural language processing , sentiment analysis , computer science , relevance (law) , domain (mathematical analysis) , artificial intelligence , field (mathematics) , feature (linguistics) , grammar , text corpus , linguistics , mathematical analysis , philosophy , mathematics , political science , pure mathematics , law
The overwhelming majority of existing approaches to opinion feature extraction trust mining patterns for one review corpus, ignoring the nontrivial disparities in word spacing characteristics of opinion options across completely different corpora. During this research a unique technique to spot opinion options from on-line reviews by exploiting the distinction in opinion feature statistics across two corpora, one domain-specific corpus (i.e., the given review corpus) and one domain-independent corpus (i.e., the contrasting corpus). The tendency to capture this inequality called domain relevance (DR), characterizes the relevancy of a term to a text assortment. The tendency to extract an inventory of candidate opinion options from the domain review corpus by shaping a group of grammar dependence rules. for every extracted candidate feature, to have a tendency to estimate its intrinsic-domain relevancy (IDR) and extrinsic-domain relevance(EDR) scores on the domain-dependent and domain-independent corpora, severally. Natural language processing (NLP) refers to computer systems that analyze, attempt understand, or produce one or more human languages, such as English, Japanese, Italian, or Russian. Process information contained in natural language text. The input might be text, spoken language, or keyboard input. The field of NLP is primarily concerned with getting computers to perform useful and interesting tasks with human languages. The field of NLP is secondarily concerned with helping us come to a better understanding of human language