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Sentiment analysis: a market relevant and reliable measure of public feeling?

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Sentiment analysis: a market relevant and reliable measure of public feeling? / Gunter, Barrie; Koteyko, Nelya; Atanasova, Dimitrinka.
In: International Journal of Market Research, Vol. 56, No. 2, 2014, p. 231-247.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Gunter, B, Koteyko, N & Atanasova, D 2014, 'Sentiment analysis: a market relevant and reliable measure of public feeling?', International Journal of Market Research, vol. 56, no. 2, pp. 231-247. https://doi.org/10.2501/IJMR-2014-014

APA

Gunter, B., Koteyko, N., & Atanasova, D. (2014). Sentiment analysis: a market relevant and reliable measure of public feeling? International Journal of Market Research, 56(2), 231-247. https://doi.org/10.2501/IJMR-2014-014

Vancouver

Gunter B, Koteyko N, Atanasova D. Sentiment analysis: a market relevant and reliable measure of public feeling? International Journal of Market Research. 2014;56(2):231-247. doi: 10.2501/IJMR-2014-014

Author

Gunter, Barrie ; Koteyko, Nelya ; Atanasova, Dimitrinka. / Sentiment analysis : a market relevant and reliable measure of public feeling?. In: International Journal of Market Research. 2014 ; Vol. 56, No. 2. pp. 231-247.

Bibtex

@article{31dd171b08314a65b535b225a56699d4,
title = "Sentiment analysis: a market relevant and reliable measure of public feeling?",
abstract = "This paper critically examines emergent research with sentiment analysis tools to assess their current status and relevance to applied opinion and behaviour measurement. The rapid spread of online news and online chatter in blogs, micro-blogs and social media sites has created a potentially rich source of public opinion. Waves of public feeling are vented spontaneously on a wide range of issues on a minute-by-minute basis in the online world. These online discourses are continually being refreshed, and businesses and advertisers, governments and policy makers have woken up to the fact that this universe of self-perpetuating human sentiment could represent a valuable resource to guide political and business decisions. The massive size of this repository of emotional content renders manual analysis of it feasible only for tiny portions of its totality, and even then can be labour intensive. Computer scientists have however produced software tools that can apply linguistic rules to provide electronic readings of meanings and emotions. These tools are now being utilised by applied social science and market researchers to yield sentiment profiles from online discourses created within specific platforms that purport to represent reliable substitutes for more traditional, offline measures of public opinion. This paper considers what these tools have demonstrated so far and where caution in their application is still called for.",
author = "Barrie Gunter and Nelya Koteyko and Dimitrinka Atanasova",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.2501/IJMR-2014-014",
language = "English",
volume = "56",
pages = "231--247",
journal = "International Journal of Market Research",
issn = "1470-7853",
publisher = "Market Research Society",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Sentiment analysis

T2 - a market relevant and reliable measure of public feeling?

AU - Gunter, Barrie

AU - Koteyko, Nelya

AU - Atanasova, Dimitrinka

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - This paper critically examines emergent research with sentiment analysis tools to assess their current status and relevance to applied opinion and behaviour measurement. The rapid spread of online news and online chatter in blogs, micro-blogs and social media sites has created a potentially rich source of public opinion. Waves of public feeling are vented spontaneously on a wide range of issues on a minute-by-minute basis in the online world. These online discourses are continually being refreshed, and businesses and advertisers, governments and policy makers have woken up to the fact that this universe of self-perpetuating human sentiment could represent a valuable resource to guide political and business decisions. The massive size of this repository of emotional content renders manual analysis of it feasible only for tiny portions of its totality, and even then can be labour intensive. Computer scientists have however produced software tools that can apply linguistic rules to provide electronic readings of meanings and emotions. These tools are now being utilised by applied social science and market researchers to yield sentiment profiles from online discourses created within specific platforms that purport to represent reliable substitutes for more traditional, offline measures of public opinion. This paper considers what these tools have demonstrated so far and where caution in their application is still called for.

AB - This paper critically examines emergent research with sentiment analysis tools to assess their current status and relevance to applied opinion and behaviour measurement. The rapid spread of online news and online chatter in blogs, micro-blogs and social media sites has created a potentially rich source of public opinion. Waves of public feeling are vented spontaneously on a wide range of issues on a minute-by-minute basis in the online world. These online discourses are continually being refreshed, and businesses and advertisers, governments and policy makers have woken up to the fact that this universe of self-perpetuating human sentiment could represent a valuable resource to guide political and business decisions. The massive size of this repository of emotional content renders manual analysis of it feasible only for tiny portions of its totality, and even then can be labour intensive. Computer scientists have however produced software tools that can apply linguistic rules to provide electronic readings of meanings and emotions. These tools are now being utilised by applied social science and market researchers to yield sentiment profiles from online discourses created within specific platforms that purport to represent reliable substitutes for more traditional, offline measures of public opinion. This paper considers what these tools have demonstrated so far and where caution in their application is still called for.

U2 - 10.2501/IJMR-2014-014

DO - 10.2501/IJMR-2014-014

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:84897449066

VL - 56

SP - 231

EP - 247

JO - International Journal of Market Research

JF - International Journal of Market Research

SN - 1470-7853

IS - 2

ER -