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      Sentiment Analysis in Health and Well-Being: Systematic Review

      review-article
      , MSc 1 , , PhD 1 , , PhD 1 ,
      (Reviewer), (Reviewer), (Reviewer)
      JMIR Medical Informatics
      JMIR Publications
      sentiment analysis, natural language processing, text mining, machine learning

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          Abstract

          Background

          Sentiment analysis (SA) is a subfield of natural language processing whose aim is to automatically classify the sentiment expressed in a free text. It has found practical applications across a wide range of societal contexts including marketing, economy, and politics. This review focuses specifically on applications related to health, which is defined as “a state of complete physical, mental, and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity.”

          Objective

          This study aimed to establish the state of the art in SA related to health and well-being by conducting a systematic review of the recent literature. To capture the perspective of those individuals whose health and well-being are affected, we focused specifically on spontaneously generated content and not necessarily that of health care professionals.

          Methods

          Our methodology is based on the guidelines for performing systematic reviews. In January 2019, we used PubMed, a multifaceted interface, to perform a literature search against MEDLINE. We identified a total of 86 relevant studies and extracted data about the datasets analyzed, discourse topics, data creators, downstream applications, algorithms used, and their evaluation.

          Results

          The majority of data were collected from social networking and Web-based retailing platforms. The primary purpose of online conversations is to exchange information and provide social support online. These communities tend to form around health conditions with high severity and chronicity rates. Different treatments and services discussed include medications, vaccination, surgery, orthodontic services, individual physicians, and health care services in general. We identified 5 roles with respect to health and well-being among the authors of the types of spontaneously generated narratives considered in this review: a sufferer, an addict, a patient, a carer, and a suicide victim. Out of 86 studies considered, only 4 reported the demographic characteristics. A wide range of methods were used to perform SA. Most common choices included support vector machines, naïve Bayesian learning, decision trees, logistic regression, and adaptive boosting. In contrast with general trends in SA research, only 1 study used deep learning. The performance lags behind the state of the art achieved in other domains when measured by F-score, which was found to be below 60% on average. In the context of SA, the domain of health and well-being was found to be resource poor: few domain-specific corpora and lexica are shared publicly for research purposes.

          Conclusions

          SA results in the area of health and well-being lag behind those in other domains. It is yet unclear if this is because of the intrinsic differences between the domains and their respective sublanguages, the size of training datasets, the lack of domain-specific sentiment lexica, or the choice of algorithms.

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          Most cited references123

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          The Stanford CoreNLP Natural Language Processing Toolkit

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            CROWDSOURCING A WORD-EMOTION ASSOCIATION LEXICON

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              Recognizing contextual polarity in phrase-level sentiment analysis

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                JMIR Med Inform
                JMIR Med Inform
                JMI
                JMIR Medical Informatics
                JMIR Publications (Toronto, Canada )
                2291-9694
                January 2020
                28 January 2020
                : 8
                : 1
                : e16023
                Affiliations
                [1 ] School of Computer Science & Informatics Cardiff University Cardiff United Kingdom
                Author notes
                Corresponding Author: Irena Spasic spasici@ 123456cardiff.ac.uk
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5222-1268
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9731-3385
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8132-3885
                Article
                v8i1e16023
                10.2196/16023
                7013658
                32012057
                7f93a51b-1244-4970-b4f7-0958dbcb3ad7
                ©Anastazia Zunic, Padraig Corcoran, Irena Spasic. Originally published in JMIR Medical Informatics (http://medinform.jmir.org), 28.01.2020.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Medical Informatics, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://medinform.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.

                History
                : 27 August 2019
                : 26 October 2019
                : 26 October 2019
                : 27 October 2019
                Categories
                Review
                Review

                sentiment analysis,natural language processing,text mining,machine learning

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