Discussion Board Replay, computer science homework help
Discussion Board Replay, computer science homework help
THIS WAS MY INITIAL POST
Sentiment Analysis
Note: I did analysis using 5 different tools. But Unfortunately I couldn’t provide the results from the Standford University Sentiment Analysis tool. It doesn’t give a consolidated result. But it gives a good analysis of individual sections of a textual content.
A Superman we can root for, June 28, 2006
I remember seeing Superman IV in the theaters when I was six, how there were so many people swarming all around, how there was excitement. Clearly it was a shoddy movie, but to a kid you just can’t buy that kind of palpable movie madness.
Now I’m as old as my parents were when they saw the very first Superman, and I’ve got to say this must be what it felt like. I think Bryan Singer is fast becoming one of the most respectable directors in Hollywood, and what he did with this movie–on a far, far grander scale than either of his X-Men movies–merits SOME kind of award come Oscar time.
We all know the story–Kryptonian boy comes to Earth, saves man from the foibles of archnemesis Lex Luthor, woos Lois Lane. Singer and Co. decided to have this movie pick up after Superman II (wise move) but you never really get a jarring sense of chronology–no General Zod references here. Instead, Supe has just returned from a nearly five-year journey to see if anything remains of his homeworld; alas, the answer is no.
What’s strange is that him being gone is such a small deal when it comes to the overall movie. But that’s okay; there’s plenty more fantastic things to keep the average moviegoer and Superman afficionado happy. What I love most about this sequel is that so much of it feels like home–Brandon Routh has moments where he looks exactly like the dearly departed Christopher Reeve, and his voice is dead-on most of the time. He quotes several lines from the first movie to great effect. Kate Bosworth as Lois isn’t as quirky as Margot Kidder but she still can’t spell, and she does the best job I’ve seen in a long time of playing the “strong female” role without ever drawing your attention to it.
The plot also feels familiar–Superman spends a night righting wrongs across the world; Luthor AGAIN gets hold of that Adis Ababa kryptonite, and Supe AGAIN falls prey to it; but there are intriguing elements dealing with Fortress crystals that take Luthor into land-grabbing madness like we’ve never seen.
The special effects are superb, of course; you can’t spend almost $300 million and get it wrong! Here is where I thought Singer might overdo things, but his restraint is commendable. He allows Routh to do all the old Superman things and yet they don’t feel aged at all. Singer was concerned with how to entertain a generation where flying is no longer the spectacle it once was, and yet, watching the movie, it’s hard to believe that any kid, no matter how jaded, could scoff at what’s on screen. The movie is that well done.
Analysis Results
Lexalytics: This document is POSITIVE.
Python NLTK: This text is pos.
Subjectivity
•neutral: 0.2
•polar: 0.8
Polarity
•pos: 0.6
•neg: 0.4
http://www.danielsoper.com/sentimentanalysis/: This text has a sentiment score of 79.9. This means that the overall sentiment or tone of this text is quite positive / enthusiastic.
http://werfamous.com/sentimentanalyzer/: Your score is : Sentiment of 24%, with a confidence of 56%.
Superman Returns, but he might as well have stayed away, December 16, 2006
This review is from: Superman Returns (Widescreen Edition) (DVD)
Wow, that was like bad fanfiction. Bryan Singer did a great job on the first two X-Men movies, but this one was atrocious.
The basic plot of the movie, for those who don’t know already, is that Superman has been gone from Earth for five years, investigating the remnants of Krypton, recently discovered by astronomers. He returns to Earth to find that Lois Lane, bitter about his sudden departure, has won a Pulitzer for an anti-Superman editorial (“Why the World Doesn’t Need Superman”) and is engaged (to fellow reporter Richard White) with a son. Much of the movie is devoted to Superman’s struggle to once again fit in to the world, and to his angst over Lois’ being engaged.
Why does this suck? Well, much of the movie is ponderous and pretentious, one of those comic-book movies that’s ashamed of being a comic-book movie, and desperately wants to have Real Human Drama. It wants to have Real Drama so much, in fact, that there are lots of scenes featuring little more than the actors furrowing their brows and looking concerned. It’s certainly possible for a comic-book movie to have real drama, but not when it’s so self-conscious about it. It doesn’t help that Lois’ beau is played by the very smarmy Jason Marsden, who played a very smarmy Cyclops in the X-Men movies. There’s no real identification with the character when he’s so unlikable. With so much emoting-for-its-own-sake and so little action (more on this later), the movie begins to feel very soap-operatic.
Now, there is one really good thing about this movie, and that’s Kevin Spacey as Lex Luthor. He’s both gleefully evil and genuinely funny, a very, very bad man who revels in his complete amorality. Arguably, his performance gets hammy at times, but it’s certainly entertaining. If only his henchmen didn’t ruin much of it. In this movie, Luthor hangs around with a series of comically stupid goons with the approximate competence of the burglars in “Home Alone.” And he has as a sidekick a hooker named Kitty Kowalski, whose character is strictly restricted to being a complete airhead and saying stupid things for comic effect. In almost every modern (post-Crisis) version of the Superman mythos, Lex Luthor has been a serious, well-organized master criminal. It makes absolutely no sense for him to surround himself with bunglers who wouldn’t be out of place on the `60s Batman TV series.
Analysis Results
Lexalytics: This document is negative.
Python NLTK: This text is neg.
Subjectivity
•neutral: 0.2
•polar: 0.8
Polarity
•pos: 0.2
•neg: 0.8
http://www.danielsoper.com/sentimentanalysis/: This text has a sentiment score of 22.3. This means that the overall sentiment or tone of this text is somewhat positive / enthusiastic.
http://werfamous.com/sentimentanalyzer/: Your score is : Sentiment of 1%, with a confidence of 49%.
Up, up, and…[spoiler alert]…wait, he has a kid?!, August 1, 2014
By ishakur
Verified Purchase(What’s this?)
This review is from: Superman Returns (Amazon Video)
So when it first came out, I really liked the movie. Friends, family, and bystanders would make fun of me for liking the movie so much. So I decided to watch it again and reaffirm my love for the movie. I have to say, that I found myself completely disappointed. Is it a result of watching this in context of the well produced recent superhero movies including Man of Steel? Maybe. But with a Bryan Singer flick, you’d still have high expectations. Nonetheless, they could’ve given more background on him leaving Earth and coming back. I think the movie focused too much on the nostalgia of it being a Superman flick. But I still maintain that I loved the surprise of Supes having a kid. That, to me, was too legit and a big reason for giving it three stars.
Analysis Results
Lexalytics: This document is positive.
Python NLTK: This text is pos.
Subjectivity
•neutral: 0.2
•polar: 0.8
Polarity
•pos: 0.6
•neg: 0.4
http://www.danielsoper.com/sentimentanalysis/: This text has a sentiment score of100.0. This means that the overall sentiment or tone of this text is very positive / enthusiastic.
http://werfamous.com/sentimentanalyzer/: Your score is : Sentiment of 24%, with a confidence of 42%.
In your opinion, which of the applications that you tested was the most accurate?
I personally felt that the Stanford University Sentiment Analysis was the best. Even though it didn’t provide a consolidated result, if we can calculate the average of all the results produced, it can give better results compared to the other tools.
What are the limitations of sentiment analysis applications?
Sentiment analysis applications analyze a sentence based on the incidence of individual words. So, some of the limitations of sentiment analysis applications are as below:
* People might have made a negative comment about something which otherwise had a neutral opinion. That may be because of some other negative situation that they might have been through on that particular day. A sentiment analysis application cannot understand that.
* “Thanks a lot sir, I am unable to go on my vacation now because of this amazing project!”. This sentence would be analyzed as a positive one by a sentiment analysis application based on the words thanks and amazing. Complex expressions and context relevant comments cannot be analyzed properly.
* Sentiment analysis applications cannot properly analyze a sentence with multiple emotions in it. Example: “I love chocolates, but I don’t want to have one now.”.
Given an example of how a company can use sentiment analysis.
A company can use sentiment analysis for many purposes. For example, they can monitor how employees are communicating with each other about their work and know if anyone is planning to leave the company in the near future. That way they can act on it accordingly. They can also monitor if any employee is negotiating their defection to a competitor by identifying any atypical frequency and vocabulary used by the employees.
Organizations can also use sentiment analysis to analyze tens of thousands of posts online to pick the top few posts to focus on. They can also analyze the sentiment indexes of an individual who posted something about the organization online. That helps the organization in responding to that individual appropriately.
References:
(2016, September, 28). The Extreme Limitations of Sentiment Analysis: What Insights are You Missing in Your Data? Retrieved from
http://www.kanjoya.com/the-extreme-limitations-of-…
(2016, September, 28). Sentiment Analysis Can Do More than Prevent Fraud and Turnover. Retrieved from
https://hbr.org/2016/01/sentiment-analysis-can-do-…
(2016, September, 28). How Companies Can Use Sentiment Analysis to Improve Their Business. Retrieved from
http://mashable.com/2010/04/19/sentiment-analysis/…
I GOT A COMMENT
As you found some tools have limitations and why it is important to know the strengths and weakness of your tools.
CAN YOU PLEASE GIVE REPLAY TO THAT COMMENT IN A PARAGRAPH
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