4.6 Article

Sentiment analysis of Chinese microblogging based on sentiment ontology: a case study of '7.23 Wenzhou Train Collision'

Journal

CONNECTION SCIENCE
Volume 25, Issue 4, Pages 161-178

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09540091.2013.851172

Keywords

Chinese microblogging; sentiment analysis; fuzzy sentiment ontology; sentiment computing; 7; 23 Wenzhou Train Collision

Funding

  1. NSFC [70971099, 71371144]
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [1200219198]
  3. Shanghai philosophy and social science planning projects [2013BGL004]
  4. Shanghai Science and Technology Development Funds [12692193000]

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Sentiment analysis of microblogging texts can facilitate both organisations' public opinion monitoring and governments' response strategies development. Nevertheless, most of the existing analysis methods are conducted on Twitter, lacking of sentiment analysis of Chinese microblogging (Weibo), and they generally rely on a large number of manually annotated training or machine learning to perform sentiment classification, yielding with difficulties in application. This paper addresses these problems and employs a sentiment ontology model to examine sentiment analysis of Chinese microblogging. We conduct a sentiment analysis of all public microblogging posts about 7.23 Wenzhou Train Collision' broadcasted by Sina microblogging users between 23 July and 1 August 2011. For every day in this time period, we first extract eight dimensions of sentiment (expect, joy, love, surprise, anxiety, sorrow, angry, and hate), and then build fuzzy sentiment ontology based on HowNet and semantic similarity for sentiment analysis; we also establish computing methods of influence and sentiment of microblogging texts; and we finally explore the change of public sentiment after 7.23 Wenzhou Train Collision'. The results show that the established sentiment analysis method has excellent application, and the change of different emotional values can reflect the success or failure of guiding the public opinion by the government.

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