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Journal ArticleDOI

Survey on Aspect-Level Sentiment Analysis

TLDR
An in-depth overview of the current state-of-the-art of aspect-level sentiment analysis is given, showing the tremendous progress that has been made in finding both the target, which can be an entity as such, or some aspect of it, and the corresponding sentiment.
Abstract
The field of sentiment analysis, in which sentiment is gathered, analyzed, and aggregated from text, has seen a lot of attention in the last few years. The corresponding growth of the field has resulted in the emergence of various subareas, each addressing a different level of analysis or research question. This survey focuses on aspect-level sentiment analysis, where the goal is to find and aggregate sentiment on entities mentioned within documents or aspects of them. An in-depth overview of the current state-of-the-art is given, showing the tremendous progress that has already been made in finding both the target, which can be an entity as such, or some aspect of it, and the corresponding sentiment. Aspect-level sentiment analysis yields very fine-grained sentiment information which can be useful for applications in various domains. Current solutions are categorized based on whether they provide a method for aspect detection, sentiment analysis, or both. Furthermore, a breakdown based on the type of algorithm used is provided. For each discussed study, the reported performance is included. To facilitate the quantitative evaluation of the various proposed methods, a call is made for the standardization of the evaluation methodology that includes the use of shared data sets. Semantically-rich concept-centric aspect-level sentiment analysis is discussed and identified as one of the most promising future research direction.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Deep Learning for Aspect-Based Sentiment Analysis: A Comparative Review

TL;DR: This article aims to provide a comparative review of deep learning for aspect-based sentiment analysis to place different approaches in context.
Book ChapterDOI

Sentiment Analysis: Detecting Valence, Emotions, and Other Affectual States from Text

TL;DR: Sentiment analysis is the task of automatically determining from text the attitude, emotion, or some other affectual state of the author as mentioned in this paper, which is a difficult task due to the complexity and subtlety of language use.
Journal ArticleDOI

A survey of sentiment analysis in social media

TL;DR: A large quantity of techniques and methods are categorized and compared in the area of sentiment analysis, and different types of data and advanced tools for research are introduced, as well as their limitations.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Aspect-Level Sentiment Analysis Via Convolution over Dependency Tree

TL;DR: A convolution over a dependency tree (CDT) model which exploits a Bi-directional Long Short Term Memory (Bi-LSTM) to learn representations for features of a sentence, and further enhance the embeddings with a graph convolutional network (GCN) which operates directly on the dependency tree of the sentence.
Journal Article

Mining Opinion Features in Customer Reviews.

TL;DR: A survey on the techniques used for designing software to mine opinion features in reviews and how Natural Language Processing techniques such as NLTK for Python can be applied to raw customer reviews and keywords can be extracted.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Latent dirichlet allocation

TL;DR: This work proposes a generative model for text and other collections of discrete data that generalizes or improves on several previous models including naive Bayes/unigram, mixture of unigrams, and Hofmann's aspect model.
Proceedings Article

Latent Dirichlet Allocation

TL;DR: This paper proposed a generative model for text and other collections of discrete data that generalizes or improves on several previous models including naive Bayes/unigram, mixture of unigrams, and Hof-mann's aspect model, also known as probabilistic latent semantic indexing (pLSI).
Book

A mathematical theory of evidence

Glenn Shafer
TL;DR: This book develops an alternative to the additive set functions and the rule of conditioning of the Bayesian theory: set functions that need only be what Choquet called "monotone of order of infinity." and Dempster's rule for combining such set functions.