4.7 Article

TensiStrength: Stress and relaxation magnitude detection for social media texts

Journal

INFORMATION PROCESSING & MANAGEMENT
Volume 53, Issue 1, Pages 106-121

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ipm.2016.06.009

Keywords

Stress; Relaxation; Sentiment analysis; Opinion mining; Affective computing

Funding

  1. European Union [636160-2]

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Computer systems need to be able to react to stress in order to perform optimally on some tasks. This article describes TensiStrength, a system to detect the strength of stress and relaxation expressed in social media text messages. TensiStrength uses a lexical approach and a set of rules to detect direct and indirect expressions of stress or relaxation, particularly in the context of transportation. It is slightly more effective than a comparable sentiment analysis program, although their similar performances occur despite differences on almost half of the tweets gathered. The effectiveness of TensiStrength depends on the nature of the tweets classified, with tweets that are rich in stress-related terms being particularly problematic. Although generic machine learning methods can give better performance than TensiStrength overall, they exploit topic-related terms in a way that may be undesirable in practical applications and that may not work as well in more focused contexts. In conclusion, TensiStrength and generic machine learning approaches work well enough to be practical choices for intelligent applications that need to take advantage of stress information, and the decision about which to use depends on the nature of the texts analysed and the purpose of the task. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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