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Cited 2 time in webofscience Cited 3 time in scopus
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Prediction of infectious diseases using sentiment analysis on social media dataopen access

Authors
Song, YoungchulYoon, Byungun
Issue Date
Sep-2024
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Keywords
Algorithm; Article; Artificial Intelligence; Coronavirus Disease 2019; Deep Learning; Deep Neural Network; Gated Recurrent Unit Network; Human; Infection; Infection Rate; Machine Learning; Prediction; Sentiment Analysis; Social Media; Social Network; Time Series Analysis; Virus Transmission; Communicable Disease; Data Mining; Epidemiology; Procedures; Algorithms; Communicable Diseases; Data Mining; Humans; Machine Learning; Social Media
Citation
PLoS ONE, v.19, no.9, pp 1 - 21
Pages
21
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
PLoS ONE
Volume
19
Number
9
Start Page
1
End Page
21
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/23265
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0309842
ISSN
1932-6203
1932-6203
Abstract
As the influence and risk of infectious diseases increase, efforts are being made to predict the number of confirmed infectious disease patients, but research involving the qualitative opinions of social media users is scarce. However, social data can change the psychology and behaviors of crowds through information dissemination, which can affect the spread of infectious diseases. Existing studies have used the number of confirmed cases and spatial data to predict the number of confirmed cases of infectious diseases. However, studies using opinions from social data that affect changes in human behavior in relation to the spread of infectious diseases are inadequate. Therefore, herein, we propose a new approach for sentiment analysis of social data by using opinion mining and to predict the number of confirmed cases of infectious diseases by using machine learning techniques. To build a sentiment dictionary specialized for predicting infectious diseases, we used Word2Vec to expand the existing sentiment dictionary and calculate the daily sentiment polarity by dividing it into positive and negative polarities from collected social data. Thereafter, we developed an algorithm to predict the number of confirmed infectious patients by using both positive and negative polarities with DNN, LSTM and GRU. The method proposed herein showed that the prediction results of the number of confirmed cases obtained using opinion mining were 1.12% and 3% better than those obtained without using opinion mining in LSTM and GRU model, and it is expected that social data will be used from a qualitative perspective for predicting the number of confirmed cases of infectious diseases.
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