
arXiv: 2411.04862
Title: Sentiment Analysis of Spanish Political Party Communications on Twitter Using Pre-trained Language Models Authors: Chuqiao Song, Shunzhang Chen, Xinyi Cai, Hao Chen Comments: 21 pages, 6 figures Abstract: This study investigates sentiment patterns within Spanish political party communications on Twitter by leveraging BETO and RoBERTuito, two pre-trained language models optimized for Spanish text. Using a dataset of tweets from major Spanish political parties: PSOE, PP, Vox, Podemos, and Ciudadanos, spanning 2019 to 2024, this research analyzes sentiment distributions and explores the relationship between sentiment expression and party ideology. The findings indicate that both models consistently identify a predominant Neutral sentiment across all parties, with significant variations in Negative and Positive sentiments that align with ideological distinctions. Specifically, Vox exhibits higher levels of Negative sentiment, while PSOE demonstrates relatively high Positive sentiment, supporting the hypothesis that emotional appeals in political messaging reflect ideological stances. This study underscores the potential of pre-trained language models for non-English sentiment analysis on social media, providing insights into sentiment dynamics that shape public discourse within Spain's multi-party political system. Keywords: Spanish politics, sentiment analysis, pre-trained language models, Twitter, BETO, RoBERTuito, political ideology, multi-party system
21 pages, 6 figures
FOS: Computer and information sciences, Computer Science - Computers and Society, Computer Science - Computation and Language, Computers and Society (cs.CY), 68T50 (Natural Language Processing), 68T10 (Pattern Recognition, Speech Recognition), 91F10 (Political Science), Computation and Language (cs.CL)
FOS: Computer and information sciences, Computer Science - Computers and Society, Computer Science - Computation and Language, Computers and Society (cs.CY), 68T50 (Natural Language Processing), 68T10 (Pattern Recognition, Speech Recognition), 91F10 (Political Science), Computation and Language (cs.CL)
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