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Negative Deceptive Opinion Spam

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TLDR
This work creates and study the first dataset of deceptive opinion spam with negative sentiment reviews, and finds that standard n-gram text categorization techniques can detect negative deceptive opinions spam with performance far surpassing that of human judges.
Abstract
The rising influence of user-generated online reviews (Cone, 2011) has led to growing incentive for businesses to solicit and manufacture DECEPTIVE OPINION SPAM—fictitious reviews that have been deliberately written to sound authentic and deceive the reader. Recently, Ott et al. (2011) have introduced an opinion spam dataset containing gold standard deceptive positive hotel reviews. However, the complementary problem of negative deceptive opinion spam, intended to slander competitive offerings, remains largely unstudied. Following an approach similar to Ott et al. (2011), in this work we create and study the first dataset of deceptive opinion spam with negative sentiment reviews. Based on this dataset, we find that standard n-gram text categorization techniques can detect negative deceptive opinion spam with performance far surpassing that of human judges. Finally, in conjunction with the aforementioned positive review dataset, we consider the possible interactions between sentiment and deception, and present initial results that encourage further exploration of this relationship.

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References
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Nonverbal Leakage and Clues to Deception

Paul Ekman, +1 more
- 01 Feb 1969 - 
TL;DR: The study explores the interaction situation, and considers how within deception interactions differences in neuroanatomy and cultural influences combine to produce specific types of body movements and facial expressions which escape efforts to deceive and emerge as leakage or deception clues.
Journal ArticleDOI

Accuracy of Deception Judgments

TL;DR: It is proposed that people judge others' deceptions more harshly than their own and that this double standard in evaluating deceit can explain much of the accumulated literature.
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