Work place: Department of Computer Science and Engineering, United College of Engineering & Research, Prayagraj,211011, India
E-mail: loginsneha91@gmail.com
Website: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0621-1805
Research Interests:
Biography
Snehlata has done her Bachelors of Technology (Computer Science and Engineering) from U.P. Technical University, Lucknow in 2011. She has done M.S. in Cyber Law and Information Security from IIIT-Allahabad, India in 2014. She has done Ph.D. in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at BBAU (Central University) Lucknow in 2021. Her research interests include image recognition, information security, and cyber forensics. She is having membership of IEEE and CSI. She has published more than 10 research papers in reputed journals and conferences.
By Aditya Bhushan Devanshi Dwivedi Ashutosh Kumar Singh Snehlata
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5815/ijmecs.2024.06.02, Pub. Date: 8 Dec. 2024
In today’s digital age dominated by social media, understanding public sentiment through Twitter analysis has become imperative. With a staggering 100 million active users on platforms like Twitter and an influx of 572,000 new accounts daily, the vast reservoir of user-generated content underscores the necessity for advanced sentiment analysis tools. This study delves into the realm of sentiment analysis techniques on Twitter, with a particular emphasis on employing Machine Learning (ML) methods. The proposed framework harnesses the power of Natural Language Processing (NLP) and Deep Learning architectures, specifically advocating for a synergistic blend of Convolutional Neural Networks (CNN) and Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) networks. Additionally, it explores the efficacy of traditional ML algorithms such as Support Vector Machines (SVM), Random Forest, and Multi-Layer Perceptron (MLP) in this context. The study’s findings illuminate diverse performance metrics across the employed models. While SVM exhibits moderate accuracy, it grapples with challenges in recall and F1-score for sentiment class 1. Conversely, the CNN-LSTM model emerges as a standout performer, boasting impressive accuracy rates of 97% and 98% respectively. Notably, this model excels in sentiment classification across all classes, underscoring its efficacy in discerning nuanced sentiment nuances within tweets. Furthermore, the study underscores the critical importance of judiciously selecting ML algorithms tailored to the intricacies of Twitter sentiment analysis. By leveraging advanced NLP techniques and deep learning architectures, researchers and practitioners can glean deeper insights into the dynamic landscape of public sentiment on social media platforms like Twitter. Such insights hold significant implications for diverse domains, including marketing, brand management, and public opinion analysis.
[...] Read more.Subscribe to receive issue release notifications and newsletters from MECS Press journals