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Twitter Sentiment Recognition using Support Vector Machine
Author(s) -
V. Uday Kumar,
CMAK Zeelan Basha,
Mahesh Chandra,
D. Mahesh,
Kamalammagari Anish
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
international journal of recent technology and engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2277-3878
DOI - 10.35940/ijrte.d9414.118419
Subject(s) - computer science , feeling , hash function , set (abstract data type) , context (archaeology) , natural language processing , social media , artificial intelligence , data set , data science , information retrieval , world wide web , psychology , social psychology , paleontology , computer security , biology , programming language
In this we explore the effectiveness of language features to identify Twitter messages ' feelings. We assess the utility of existing lexical tools as well as capturing features of informal and innovative language knowledge used in micro blogging. We take a supervised approach to the problem, but to create training data, we use existing hash tags in the Twitter data. We Using three separate Twitter messaging companies in our experiments. We use the hash tagged data set (HASH) for development and training, which we compile from the Edinburgh Twitter corpus, and the emoticon data set (EMOT) from the I Sieve Corporation (ISIEVE) for evaluation. Twitter contains huge amount of data . This data may be of different types such as structured data or unstructured data. So by using this data and Appling pre processing techniques we can be able to read the comments from the users. And also the comments will be classified into three categories. They are positive negative and also the neutral comments.Today they use the processing of natural language, information, and text interpretation to derive and classify text feeling into pos itive, negative, and neutral categories. We can also examine the utility of language features to identify Twitter mess ages ' feelings. In addition, state-of - the-art approaches take into consideration only the tweet to be classified when classifying the feeling; they ignore its context (i.e. related tweets).Since tweets are usually short and more ambiguous, however, it is sometimes not enough to consider only the current tweet for classification of sentiments.Informal and innovative microblogging language. We take a sup ervised approach to the problem, but to create training data, we use existing hashtags in the Twitter data.This paper also contrasts sentiment analysis approaches in evaluating political views using Naïve Bayes supervised machine learning algorithm which performs in better analysis compared to other techniques Paper

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