Choosing your weapons: On sentiment analysis tools for software engineering research
Recent years have seen an increasing attention to social aspects of software engineering, including studies of emotions and sentiments experienced and expressed by the software developers. Most of these studies reuse existing sentiment analysis tools such as SentiStrength and NLTK. However, these to...
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sg-smu-ink.sis_research-65762021-01-07T14:10:40Z Choosing your weapons: On sentiment analysis tools for software engineering research JONGELING, Robbert DATTA, Subhajit SEREBRENIK, Alexander Recent years have seen an increasing attention to social aspects of software engineering, including studies of emotions and sentiments experienced and expressed by the software developers. Most of these studies reuse existing sentiment analysis tools such as SentiStrength and NLTK. However, these tools have been trained on product reviews and movie reviews and, therefore, their results might not be applicable in the software engineering domain. In this paper we study whether the sentiment analysis tools agree with the sentiment recognized by human evaluators (as reported in an earlier study) as well as with each other. Furthermore, we evaluate the impact of the choice of a sentiment analysis tool on software engineering studies by conducting a simple study of differences in issue resolution times for positive, negative and neutral texts. We repeat the study for seven datasets (issue trackers and Stack Overflow questions) and different sentiment analysis tools and observe that the disagreement between the tools can lead to contradictory conclusions. 2015-10-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/5573 info:doi/10.1109/ICSM.2015.7332508 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sis_research/article/6576/viewcontent/Choose_weapons_2015_av.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Androids Humanoid robots Labeling Manuals Sentiment analysis Software Software engineering Databases and Information Systems Numerical Analysis and Scientific Computing Software Engineering |
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Androids Humanoid robots Labeling Manuals Sentiment analysis Software Software engineering Databases and Information Systems Numerical Analysis and Scientific Computing Software Engineering JONGELING, Robbert DATTA, Subhajit SEREBRENIK, Alexander Choosing your weapons: On sentiment analysis tools for software engineering research |
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Recent years have seen an increasing attention to social aspects of software engineering, including studies of emotions and sentiments experienced and expressed by the software developers. Most of these studies reuse existing sentiment analysis tools such as SentiStrength and NLTK. However, these tools have been trained on product reviews and movie reviews and, therefore, their results might not be applicable in the software engineering domain. In this paper we study whether the sentiment analysis tools agree with the sentiment recognized by human evaluators (as reported in an earlier study) as well as with each other. Furthermore, we evaluate the impact of the choice of a sentiment analysis tool on software engineering studies by conducting a simple study of differences in issue resolution times for positive, negative and neutral texts. We repeat the study for seven datasets (issue trackers and Stack Overflow questions) and different sentiment analysis tools and observe that the disagreement between the tools can lead to contradictory conclusions. |
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JONGELING, Robbert DATTA, Subhajit SEREBRENIK, Alexander |
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JONGELING, Robbert DATTA, Subhajit SEREBRENIK, Alexander |
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JONGELING, Robbert |
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Choosing your weapons: On sentiment analysis tools for software engineering research |
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Choosing your weapons: On sentiment analysis tools for software engineering research |
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Choosing your weapons: On sentiment analysis tools for software engineering research |
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Choosing your weapons: On sentiment analysis tools for software engineering research |
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Choosing your weapons: On sentiment analysis tools for software engineering research |
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choosing your weapons: on sentiment analysis tools for software engineering research |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2015 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/5573 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sis_research/article/6576/viewcontent/Choose_weapons_2015_av.pdf |
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