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Sentiment Analysis for Words and Fiction Characters From the Perspective of Computational (Neuro-)Poetics.

Author
Abstract
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Two computational studies provide different sentiment analyses for text segments (e.g., "fearful" passages) and figures (e.g., "Voldemort") from the Harry Potter books (Rowling, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2007) based on a novel simple tool called . The tool uses vector space models together with theory-guided, empirically validated label lists to compute the valence of each word in a text by locating its position in a 2d emotion potential space spanned by the words of the vector space model. After testing the tool's accuracy with empirical data from a neurocognitive poetics study, it was applied to compute emotional figure and personality profiles (inspired by the so-called "big five" personality theory) for main characters from the book series. The results of comparative analyses using different machine-learning classifiers (e.g., AdaBoost, Neural Net) show that performs very well in predicting the emotion potential of text passages. It also produces plausible predictions regarding the emotional and personality profile of fiction characters which are correctly identified on the basis of eight character features, and it achieves a good cross-validation accuracy in classifying 100 figures into "good" vs. "bad" ones. The results are discussed with regard to potential applications of in digital literary, applied reading and neurocognitive poetics studies such as the quantification of the hybrid hero potential of figures.

Year of Publication
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0
Journal
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Frontiers in robotics and AI
Volume
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6
Number of Pages
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53
Date Published
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2019
URL
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https://doi.org/10.3389/frobt.2019.00053
DOI
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10.3389/frobt.2019.00053
Short Title
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Front Robot AI
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