社交媒体中的情绪状态与情绪词汇

A. Beasley, Winter A. Mason
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引用次数: 37

摘要

许多社交媒体研究将人们的情绪状态与他们在帖子中使用积极和消极词汇的频率等同起来。我们对515名Facebook用户和448名Twitter用户的积极情绪和消极情绪的基本真实度进行了研究。我们发现,从语言调查字数(LIWC)词典和一个被称为积极和消极情绪表(PANAS)的经过充分验证的特质情绪量表中,积极和消极情绪相关词汇之间存在统计学上显著但非常弱的相关性(ρ值在0.1到0.2范围内)。我们对推特和Facebook状态更新进行了测试,重点关注调查完成前后的不同时间段,并考虑那些经常在社交媒体上表达情绪的参与者。除了极少数例外,这种低相关性的模式仍然存在,这表明对于典型的用户来说,基于词典的情感分析工具可能不足以推断他们的真实感受。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Emotional States vs. Emotional Words in Social Media
A number of social media studies have equated people's emotional states with the frequency with which they use affectively positive and negative words in their posts. We explore how such word frequencies relate to a ground truth measure of both positive and negative emotion for 515 Facebook users and 448 Twitter users. We find statistically significant but very weak (ρ in the 0.1 to 0.2 range) correlations between positive and negative emotion-related words from the Linguistic Inquiry Word Count (LIWC) dictionary and a well-validated scale of trait emotionality called the Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS). We test this for tweets and Facebook status updates, focus on different time slices around the completion of the survey, and consider participants who report expressing emotions frequently on social media. With rare exception, this pattern of low correlation persists, suggesting that for the typical user, dictionary-based sentiment analysis tools may not be sufficient to infer how they truly feel.
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