Abstract
Understanding public emotion on social media about community wellness is crucial for enhancing health awareness and guiding policy-making. In order to more fully mine the deep contextual semantical information of short texts and further enhance the effectiveness of emotion prediction in social media, we propose the Deep Parallel Contextual Analysis Framework (DPCAF) in the community wellness domain, specifically addressing the challenges of limited text length and available semantical features in social media text. Specifically, at the embedding layer, we first utilize two different word embedding techniques to generate high-quality vector representations, aiming to achieve more comprehensive semantical capture, stronger generalization ability, and more robust model performance. Subsequently, in the deep contextual layer, the obtained representations are fused with POS and locational representations, and processed through a deep parallel layer composed of Convolutional Neural Networks and Bidirectional Long Short-Term Memory Network. An attention model is then used to further extract semantical features of social media texts. Finally, these deep parallel contextual representations are post-integrated for emotion prediction. Experiments on a dataset collected from social media regarding community wellness demonstrate that compared to benchmark models, DPCAF achieves at least a 4.81 % increase in Precision, a 3.44 % increase in Recall, and a 10.81 % increase in F1-score. Relative to the most advanced models, DPCAF shows a minimum improvement of 2.65 % in Precision, 3.02 % in Recall, and 2.53 % in F1-score.
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