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| Supervised Text Classification× | Sentiment-Analyse× | |
|---|---|---|
| Fachgebiet≠ | Political Science | Text Mining |
| Familie | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Entstehungsjahr≠ | 2013 | — |
| Urheber≠ | Machine-learning classification tradition (formalized for political text by Grimmer & Stewart; category-proportion variant by Hopkins & King) | — |
| Typ≠ | Supervised machine-learning classification of documents | NLP text-classification task |
| Wegweisende Quelle≠ | Grimmer, J., & Stewart, B. M. (2013). Text as Data: The Promise and Pitfalls of Automatic Content Analysis Methods for Political Texts. Political Analysis, 21(3), 267–297. DOI ↗ | Pang, B. & Lee, L. (2008). Opinion Mining and Sentiment Analysis. Foundations and Trends in Information Retrieval, 2(1-2), 1-135. DOI ↗ |
| Aliasnamen≠ | Supervised document classification, Text categorization, Automated text coding, Supervised content analysis | opinion mining, polarity detection, duygu analizi |
| Verwandt≠ | 5 | 3 |
| Zusammenfassung≠ | Supervised text classification trains a statistical model on documents that humans have hand-labeled, then uses it to assign categories — topic, tone, position, relevance — to the much larger set of unlabeled documents. Unlike dictionary methods, which apply a fixed word list, a supervised classifier learns from examples which textual features predict each category, so it can capture context-dependent and non-obvious cues. Grimmer and Stewart present it as a core text-as-data workflow, and a key insight is that for many political-science questions the goal is not perfect document-by-document labels but accurate estimates of category proportions across a corpus. | Sentiment analysis, also called opinion mining, is a natural-language-processing task that detects the emotional tone of text — typically classifying it as positive, negative, or neutral. It turns unstructured opinion text into structured, quantifiable polarity signals using one of three families of approaches: sentiment lexicons, trained machine-learning classifiers, or pretrained transformer models. |
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