Abstract

The article investigates the advantages, disadvantages, and areas of research that need more exploration regarding deep learning architectures used in sentiment analysis. These architectures let models learn complex language features from data without explicit feature engineering, changing sentiment analysis. The models' capacity to capture long-range dependencies has improved their context and nuanced expression interpretation, especially in long or metaphorical texts. Deep learning sentiment analysis algorithms have improved, yet they still face obstacles. The complexity of these models raises ethical questions about bias and transparency. They also require huge, annotated datasets and computational resources, which limits their use in resource-constrained contexts. Adopting deep learning models requires balancing performance and practicality. Explore critical deep learning sentiment analysis research gaps. Cross-domain and cross-lingual sentiment analysis requires context- and language-specific models. Textual and non-textual multimodal sentiment analysis offers untapped potential for complex sentiment interpretation. Responsible AI deployment requires model interpretability, robustness against adversarial assaults, and domain consistency. Finally, deep learning and sentiment analysis have changed our knowledge of human emotion. Accuracy and contextual comprehension have improved, but model transparency, data prerequisites, and practical applicability remain issues. Overcoming these restrictions and exploring research gaps will enable responsible sentiment analysis AI innovation.

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