Abstract

Congestion seems to be a daily occurrence in the Indonesian city of Jakarta. As a consequence, the rider has access to essential information regarding traffic conditions at all times, which is beneficial. Through social media platforms such as Twitter, this information is readily available to the public. On the other hand, the information offered on Twitter is still uncategorized text. DKI Jakarta, as a consequence, developed a congestion classification system that included data mining techniques, a classification approach based on the decision tree technique, and C4.5 as a component. This C4.5 method transforms a large amount of information into a decision tree that shows the rules. Geocoding will be utilized to illustrate the locations that have been gathered, and a data split with a confusion matrix will be used to assess how well the categorization process has worked. According to the study's results, the average accuracy rate is 99.08 percent, the average precision rate is 99.46 percent, and the average recall rate is 97.99 percent.

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