Determining sentiment in citation text and analyzing its impact on the proposed ranking index

5 Jul 2017  ·  Souvick Ghosh, Dipankar Das, Tanmoy Chakraborty ·

Whenever human beings interact with each other, they exchange or express opinions, emotions, and sentiments. These opinions can be expressed in text, speech or images. Analysis of these sentiments is one of the popular research areas of present day researchers. Sentiment analysis, also known as opinion mining tries to identify or classify these sentiments or opinions into two broad categories - positive and negative. In recent years, the scientific community has taken a lot of interest in analyzing sentiment in textual data available in various social media platforms. Much work has been done on social media conversations, blog posts, newspaper articles and various narrative texts. However, when it comes to identifying emotions from scientific papers, researchers have faced some difficulties due to the implicit and hidden nature of opinion. By default, citation instances are considered inherently positive in emotion. Popular ranking and indexing paradigms often neglect the opinion present while citing. In this paper, we have tried to achieve three objectives. First, we try to identify the major sentiment in the citation text and assign a score to the instance. We have used a statistical classifier for this purpose. Secondly, we have proposed a new index (we shall refer to it hereafter as M-index) which takes into account both the quantitative and qualitative factors while scoring a paper. Thirdly, we developed a ranking of research papers based on the M-index. We also try to explain how the M-index impacts the ranking of scientific papers.

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