Multi-level aspect based sentiment classification of Twitter data: using hybrid approach in deep learning

PeerJ Comput Sci. 2021 Apr 13:7:e433. doi: 10.7717/peerj-cs.433. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

Social media is a vital source to produce textual data, further utilized in various research fields. It has been considered an essential foundation for organizations to get valuable data to assess the users' thoughts and opinions on a specific topic. Text classification is a procedure to assign tags to predefined classes automatically based on their contents. The aspect-based sentiment analysis to classify the text is challenging. Every work related to sentiment analysis approached this issue as the current research usually discusses the document-level and overall sentence-level analysis rather than the particularities of the sentiments. This research aims to use Twitter data to perform a finer-grained sentiment analysis at aspect-level by considering explicit and implicit aspects. This study proposes a new Multi-level Hybrid Aspect-Based Sentiment Classification (MuLeHyABSC) approach by embedding a feature ranking process with an amendment of feature selection method for Twitter and sentiment classification comprising of Artificial Neural Network; Multi-Layer Perceptron (MLP) is used to attain improved results. In this study, different machine learning classification methods were also implemented, including Random Forest (RF), Support Vector Classifier (SVC), and seven more classifiers to compare with the proposed classification method. The implementation of the proposed hybrid method has shown better performance and the efficiency of the proposed system was validated on multiple Twitter datasets to manifest different domains. We achieved better results for all Twitter datasets used for the validation purpose of the proposed method with an accuracy of 78.99%, 84.09%, 80.38%, 82.37%, and 84.72%, respectively, compared to the baseline approaches. The proposed approach revealed that the new hybrid aspect-based text classification functionality is enhanced, and it outperformed the existing baseline methods for sentiment classification.

Keywords: Aspect-based sentiment classification; Feature extraction; Feature selection; Hybrid approach; Information gain; Multi-layer perception; Principal component analysis.

Grants and funding

The authors received no funding for this work.