Research Outputs

Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
  • Publication
    What do our Children read about? Affect analysis of Chilean school texts
    (Bahri Publications, 2015) ;
    FernĂ¡ndez, Jorge
    ;
    Segura, Alejandra
    ;
    Vidal-Castro, Christian
    ;
    Rubio-Manzano, Clemente
    We present a study of the affective character of 1st to 8th year Chilean school texts, to which we applied lexicon-based affect analysis techniques to identify 6 basic emotions (anger, sadness, fear, disgust, surprise and happiness). First, we generated a corpus of 525 documents, 18176 paragraphs and 137516 words. Then, using the affective words frequency, we built a classifier based on Emotion Word Density to detect emotions in the texts. Our results show that the predominant affective states are happiness (58%), sadness (16%) and fear (12%). The 6 basic emotions are present in most literary forms with uniform relative density except for songs, where anger is absent. Classifier performance was validated by comparing its results against the opinions of experts in the field, and its results show an above-average conformity (accuracy = 63%), above-average predictive capacity (precision = 69%) and good classifier sensitivity (recall = 80% and f-measure = 93%).
  • Publication
    The role of WordNet similarity in the affective analysis pipeline
    (Instituto Politécnico Nacional, 2019)
    Segura-Navarrete, Alejandra
    ;
    Vidal-Castro, Christian
    ;
    Rubio-Manzano, Clemente
    ;
    Sentiment Analysis (SA) is a useful and important discipline in Computer Science, as it allows having a knowledge base about the opinions of people regarding a topic. This knowledge is used to improve decision-making processes. One approach to achieve this is based on the use of lexical knowledge structures. In particular, our aim is to enrich an affective lexicon by the analysis of the similarity relationship between words. The hypothesis of this work states that the similarities of the words belonging to an affective category, with respect to any other word, behave in a homogeneous way within each affective category. The experimental results show that words of a same affective category have a homogeneous similarity with an antonym, and that the similarities of these words with any of their antonyms have a low variability. The novelty of this paper is that it builds the bases of a mechanism that allows incorporating the intensity in an affective lexicon automatically.