Personal discrimination on the Web: An Automatic way to distinguish between personal and commercial opinions

From the Announcement:

How do you tell if a website you are browsing is a showing you a personal web page expressing the opinions of an individual or the marketing speak of a commercial site in disguise? Information engineers in India and Japan believe they have found an automatic way to discriminate between personal web pages and commercial pages designed to fool consumers.

Writing in a forthcoming issue of the International Journal of Business Intelligence and Data Mining, Takahiro Hayashi of Niigata University, and colleagues, explain that their approach extracts subjective expressions from web pages. The system then scores them by degree of subjectivity and provides the reader with an indication of whether the website content expresses personal opinions or marketing speak about a product or service.

The team has evaluated the performance of their system using 1200 web pages collected from four categories: product, tourist spot, restaurant, and movie. They found that their method is much more effective in finding personal opinion pages than a general search engine, in all categories. Part of the reason for this is that search engines, such as Google, tend not to rank personal pages highly.

Personal homepages, personal blogs, web forum sites and smaller customer opinion sites are regarded as personal pages and generally don’t appear high in the search engine results pages (SERPs). Finding genuine personal opinions surveys is much harder than finding commercially biased sites, the researchers explain.

Source: EurekAlert
Hat Tip: P.W.

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