Fine grained sentiment analysis

Fine grained extraction is an important subtask in natural language processing and sentiment analysis which aims to extract ‘aspect’ terms that describe properties of entities and ‘opinion’ terms that convey user emotion and sentiment from natural language text. While multiple models and research te...

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Main Author: Jaiswal, Shantanu
Other Authors: Pan Jialin, Sinno
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/74089
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-740892023-03-03T20:58:58Z Fine grained sentiment analysis Jaiswal, Shantanu Pan Jialin, Sinno School of Computer Science and Engineering Centre for Computational Intelligence DRNTU::Engineering DRNTU::Science Fine grained extraction is an important subtask in natural language processing and sentiment analysis which aims to extract ‘aspect’ terms that describe properties of entities and ‘opinion’ terms that convey user emotion and sentiment from natural language text. While multiple models and research techniques have been proposed recently to solve this task, these techniques are confined to the ‘source domain’ or the inherent structure of training data. Application of these models in new or ‘target domains’ constitutes the significant overheads of human effort in labelling of target domain data and computational time for retraining of model. This limits the potential of such models in the industry and is also unlike the human mind, which is adept at identifying commonalities between different domains. Thus, developing techniques for domain adaptation for fine grained extraction models is an extremely relevant sub-problem for industrial applications as well as development of general intelligent machines. In this final year project, we first give an overview of the problems of fine grained natural language extraction and domain adaptation, and review corresponding literature and related research fields. We then decompose the primary problem of domain adaptation of fine grained extraction models into relevant subtasks, and review and document performance of existing research methods for domain adaptation on the “Laptop” and “Restaurant” domains of the Semeval Challenge 2014 Task 4 dataset. Finally, we experiment with the usage of unsupervised techniques to measure the syntactic, semantic (statistical) and conceptual impact of removing a word on its sentence, and document the resulting performance of using the mentioned word removal measure as an additional word feature. Bachelor of Engineering (Computer Engineering) 2018-04-24T06:01:55Z 2018-04-24T06:01:55Z 2018 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/74089 en Nanyang Technological University 57 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering
DRNTU::Science
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering
DRNTU::Science
Jaiswal, Shantanu
Fine grained sentiment analysis
description Fine grained extraction is an important subtask in natural language processing and sentiment analysis which aims to extract ‘aspect’ terms that describe properties of entities and ‘opinion’ terms that convey user emotion and sentiment from natural language text. While multiple models and research techniques have been proposed recently to solve this task, these techniques are confined to the ‘source domain’ or the inherent structure of training data. Application of these models in new or ‘target domains’ constitutes the significant overheads of human effort in labelling of target domain data and computational time for retraining of model. This limits the potential of such models in the industry and is also unlike the human mind, which is adept at identifying commonalities between different domains. Thus, developing techniques for domain adaptation for fine grained extraction models is an extremely relevant sub-problem for industrial applications as well as development of general intelligent machines. In this final year project, we first give an overview of the problems of fine grained natural language extraction and domain adaptation, and review corresponding literature and related research fields. We then decompose the primary problem of domain adaptation of fine grained extraction models into relevant subtasks, and review and document performance of existing research methods for domain adaptation on the “Laptop” and “Restaurant” domains of the Semeval Challenge 2014 Task 4 dataset. Finally, we experiment with the usage of unsupervised techniques to measure the syntactic, semantic (statistical) and conceptual impact of removing a word on its sentence, and document the resulting performance of using the mentioned word removal measure as an additional word feature.
author2 Pan Jialin, Sinno
author_facet Pan Jialin, Sinno
Jaiswal, Shantanu
format Final Year Project
author Jaiswal, Shantanu
author_sort Jaiswal, Shantanu
title Fine grained sentiment analysis
title_short Fine grained sentiment analysis
title_full Fine grained sentiment analysis
title_fullStr Fine grained sentiment analysis
title_full_unstemmed Fine grained sentiment analysis
title_sort fine grained sentiment analysis
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/74089
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