Abstract

Social media platforms make a significant contribution to modeling and influencing people’s opinions and decisions, including political views and orientation. Analyzing social media content can reveal trends and key triggers that will influence society. This paper presents an exhaustive analysis of the performance generated by various implementations of the Naïve Bayes classifier, combined with a semi-structured information approach, to identify the political orientation of Twitter users, based on their posts. As research methodology, we aggregate in a semi-structured format a database of over 86,000 political posts from Democrat (right) and Republican (left) ideologies. Such an approach allows us to associate a Democrat or Republican label to each tweet, in order to create and train the model. The semi-structured input data are processed using several NLP techniques and then the model is trained to classify the political orientation based on semantic criteria and semi-structured information. This paper examines several variations of the Naïve Bayes classifier suite: Gaussian Naïve Bayes, Multinomial Naïve Bayes, Calibrated Naïve Bayes algorithms, and tracks a variety of performance indices and their graphical representations: Prediction Accuracy, Precision, Recall, Confusion Matrix, Brier Score Loss, etc. We obtained an accuracy of around 80–85% in identifying the political orientation of the users. This leads us to the conclusion that this type of application can be integrated into a more complex system and can help in determining political trends or election results.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call