Identifying Expressions of Emotion in Text



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Identifying Expressions of Emotion in Text

Table 7. Features Used in emotion classification



GI Features

WN-Affect Features

Other Features

Emotion words

Happiness words

Emoticons

Positive words

Sadness words

Exclamation (“!”) and

Negative words

Anger words

question (“?”) marks

Interjection words

Disgust words




Pleasure words

Surprise words




Pain words

Fear words






    1. Experiments and Results


For our binary classification experiments, we used Naïve Bayes, and Support Vector Machines (SVM), which have been popularly used in sentiment classification tasks [6, 9]. All experiments were performed using stratified ten-fold cross validation. The naïve baseline for our experiments was 65.6%, which represents the accuracy achieved by assigning the label of the most frequent class (which in our case is NE) to all the instances in the dataset. Each sentence was represented by a 14-value vector, representing the number of occurrences of each feature type in the sentence. Table 9 shows the classification accuracy obtained with the Naïve Bayes and SVM text classifiers. The highest accuracy achieved was 73.89% using SVM, which is higher than the baseline. The improvement is statistically significant (we used the paired t-test, p=0.05).
To explore the contribution of different feature groups to the classification performance, we conducted experiments using (1) features from GI only, (2) features from WordNet-Affect only, (3) combined features from GI and WordNet-Affect, and
(4) all features (including the non-lexical features). We achieved the best results when


Table 8. Emotion classification accuracy




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