Abstract

Nowadays, people share their opinions through social media. This information may be informative or non-informative. Filtering informative information from social media plays a challenging issue. Nevertheless, people will interact more with that particular disaster event on social media, primarily when a disaster occurs. They share their opinion through some textual information such as tweets or posts. In this work, we propose a generalized approach for categorizing the informative and non-informative media on Twitter. We collected the seven natural disaster events from the crisisNLP. These datasets are different disaster events containing people’s opinions on that specific event. We pre-process the information, which converts the tweet information into machine-understandable vectors. Various machine learning algorithms have processed these vectors. We consider the individual performance of each ML algorithm on different disaster datasets upon choosing the best five algorithms for voting techniques. We tested the performance with matrices such as accuracy, precision, recall, and F1-score. We compared our results with existing models in which our proposed model performed better than other existing state of the art models.

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