Global events such as terrorist attacks are commented upon in social media, such as Twitter, in different languages and from different parts of the world. Most prior studies have focused on monolingual sentiment analysis, and therefore excluded an extensive proportion of the Twitter userbase. In this paper, we perform a multilingual comparative sentiment analysis study on the terrorist attack in Paris, during November 2015. In particular, we look at targeted sentiment, investigating opinions on specific entities, not simply the general sentiment of each tweet. Given the potentially inflammatory and polarizing effect that these types of tweets may have on attitudes, we examine the sentiments expressed about different targets and explore whet...
Columnists and social media users commonly stated that terrorist attacks resonate differently in the...
The dataset contains over 1.6 million tweets (tweet IDs), labeled with sentiment by human annotators...
This paper examines the effect of online social network interactions on future attitudes. Specifical...
Global events such as terrorist attacks are commented upon in social media, such as Twitter, in diff...
Crisis events such as terrorist attacks are extensively commented upon on social media platforms suc...
In this article, we propose an original method combining large-scale network and lexicometric analys...
This paper investigates bias in coverage between Western and Arab media on Twitter after the Novembe...
We describe the emergence of an online community from naturally occurring social media data. Our met...
The tracking of citizens' reactions in social media during crises has attracted an increasing level...
This paper investigates the effects that 12 different terrorist attacks had on consumer sentiment, u...
In the last 20 years, several major terror attacks conducted in the name of political Islam hit West...
Research suggests that public fear and anger in wake of a terror attack can each uniquely contribute...
© 2017 Copyright 2017 by Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands. This study examines social m...
This study examines social media responses to the 13 November 2015 Paris attacks by the Islamic Stat...
The use of social media has become an increasingly significant phenomenon in contemporary society du...
Columnists and social media users commonly stated that terrorist attacks resonate differently in the...
The dataset contains over 1.6 million tweets (tweet IDs), labeled with sentiment by human annotators...
This paper examines the effect of online social network interactions on future attitudes. Specifical...
Global events such as terrorist attacks are commented upon in social media, such as Twitter, in diff...
Crisis events such as terrorist attacks are extensively commented upon on social media platforms suc...
In this article, we propose an original method combining large-scale network and lexicometric analys...
This paper investigates bias in coverage between Western and Arab media on Twitter after the Novembe...
We describe the emergence of an online community from naturally occurring social media data. Our met...
The tracking of citizens' reactions in social media during crises has attracted an increasing level...
This paper investigates the effects that 12 different terrorist attacks had on consumer sentiment, u...
In the last 20 years, several major terror attacks conducted in the name of political Islam hit West...
Research suggests that public fear and anger in wake of a terror attack can each uniquely contribute...
© 2017 Copyright 2017 by Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands. This study examines social m...
This study examines social media responses to the 13 November 2015 Paris attacks by the Islamic Stat...
The use of social media has become an increasingly significant phenomenon in contemporary society du...
Columnists and social media users commonly stated that terrorist attacks resonate differently in the...
The dataset contains over 1.6 million tweets (tweet IDs), labeled with sentiment by human annotators...
This paper examines the effect of online social network interactions on future attitudes. Specifical...