Action rules for sentiment analysis using Twitter
by Angelina A. Tzacheva; Jaishree Ranganathan; Arunkumar Bagavathi
International Journal of Social Network Mining (IJSNM), Vol. 3, No. 1, 2020

Abstract: Actionable patterns are interesting and usable knowledge mined from large datasets. Action rules are rules that describe the possible transition of objects from one state to another with respect to a decision attribute. In this work, we extract actionable recommendations in the form of action rules, that can be applied to social networking data in a scalable manner to achieve the desired user goals. We propose extraction of actionable patterns based on sentiment analysis of social network data. In sentiment analysis there are two approaches to determine the polarity: Corpus-based, and Lexicon-based. We use corpus-based sentiment analysis approach, where sentiment values are generated based on sentence structure rather than words. Results show actionable patterns in tweet data and provide suggestions on how to change sentiment of the tweet to a more positive one. The experiment is performed with Twitter data in a distributed environment using Hadoop MapReduce for scalability with large data.

Online publication date: Wed, 11-Mar-2020

The full text of this article is only available to individual subscribers or to users at subscribing institutions.

 
Existing subscribers:
Go to Inderscience Online Journals to access the Full Text of this article.

Pay per view:
If you are not a subscriber and you just want to read the full contents of this article, buy online access here.

Complimentary Subscribers, Editors or Members of the Editorial Board of the International Journal of Social Network Mining (IJSNM):
Login with your Inderscience username and password:

    Username:        Password:         

Forgotten your password?


Want to subscribe?
A subscription gives you complete access to all articles in the current issue, as well as to all articles in the previous three years (where applicable). See our Orders page to subscribe.

If you still need assistance, please email subs@inderscience.com