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Text Analyzer Reveals Emotional 'Temperature' of Novels and Fairy Tales

KentuckyFC writes "Stories are a powerful channel for communicating emotions. But while they have been studied in detail by generations of critics, there is little in the way of objective tools for analyzing and comparing their emotional content. That looks set to change thanks to one data mining researcher who has applied the process of sentiment analysis to novels and fairy tales that have been digitized on Project Gutenburg and the Google Books Corpus. The results show the density of emotions in different parts of a story and how the emotional 'temperature' changes throughout the tale. For example, this guy has used the technique to compare the emotional content of the entire collection of the Brothers Grimm fairy tales to reveal that the darkest story is a tale called Gambling Hansel; clearly a lesson to us all."

2 of 65 comments (clear)

  1. Here is the PowerPoint for the paper by TedTschopp · · Score: 4, Informative

    Here is the a good summary of the work in a PDF of a PPT.

    http://www.saifmohammad.com/WebDocs/LaTeCH-emotions-in-books.pdf

    Ted

    --
    Fantasy remains a human right; we make in our measure and in our derivative mode... -- JRR Tolkien
  2. Related stuff by my wife on tagging narratives by Paul+Fernhout · · Score: 4, Informative

    Mainly by hand though. Free book: http://www.workingwithstories.org/
    Free software for communtieis: http://www.rakontu.org/
    Related business process patent (sadly) when at IBM Research: http://www.google.com/patents?hl=en&lr=&vid=USPAT7136791
    Past commercial software: http://www.sensemaker-suite.com/
    National security (does have some automatic aspects): http://app.rahs.gov.sg/public/www/content.aspx?sid=2955

    There is a lot you can do with stories once they are tagged for emotional intensity, whether automatically, by the teller, or by other people. Stories are all around us, as we try to make sense of our lives and events in our communities. So this sort of technology to tag emotions in stories is much more far reaching than just being about fiction. It can be used to design better products, to help communities figure out what to do about a pressing issue, to resolve conflicts, and to see emerging trends. That is one reason such work is funded by the intelligence sector (as well as businesses and some non-profits). She's been trying to make these ideas freely available to everyone, but it has been a slow going slog to follow the path of free and open source for all this.

    By someone else on the relation between emotion and reason:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Descartes'_Error

    --
    A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.