Ashima

2papers

2 Papers

CLApr 2, 2021
Mining Trends of COVID-19 Vaccine Beliefs on Twitter with Lexical Embeddings

Harshita Chopra, Aniket Vashishtha, Ridam Pal et al.

Social media plays a pivotal role in disseminating news globally and acts as a platform for people to express their opinions on various topics. A wide variety of views accompanies COVID-19 vaccination drives across the globe, often colored by emotions, which change along with rising cases, approval of vaccines, and multiple factors discussed online. This study aims at analyzing the temporal evolution of different Emotion categories: Hesitation, Rage, Sorrow, Anticipation, Faith, and Contentment with Influencing Factors: Vaccine Rollout, Misinformation, Health Effects, and Inequities as lexical categories created from Tweets belonging to five countries with vital vaccine roll-out programs, namely, India, United States of America, Brazil, United Kingdom, and Australia. We extracted a corpus of nearly 1.8 million Twitter posts related to COVID-19 vaccination. Using cosine distance from selected seed words, we expanded the vocabulary of each category and tracked the longitudinal change in their strength from June 2020 to April 2021. We used community detection algorithms to find modules in positive correlation networks. Our findings suggest that tweets expressing hesitancy towards vaccines contain the highest mentions of health-related effects in all countries. Our results indicated that the patterns of hesitancy were variable across geographies and can help us learn targeted interventions. We also observed a significant change in the linear trends of categories like hesitation and contentment before and after approval of vaccines. Negative emotions like rage and sorrow gained the highest importance in the alluvial diagram. They formed a significant module with all the influencing factors in April 2021, when India observed the second wave of COVID-19 cases. The relationship between Emotions and Influencing Factors was found to be variable across the countries.

SEAug 21, 2014
Software Cloning in Extreme Programming Environment

Ginika Mahajan, Ashima

Software systems are evolving by adding new functions and modifying existing functions over time. Through the evolution, the structure of software is becoming more complex and so the understandability and maintainability of software systems is deteriorating day by day. These are not only important but one of the most expensive activities in software development. Refactoring has often been applied to the software to improve them. One of the targets of refactoring is to limit Code Cloning because it hinders software maintenance and affects its quality. And in order to cope with the constant changes, refactoring is seen as an essential component of Extreme Programming. Agile Methods use refactoring as important key practice and are first choice for developing clone-free code. This paper summarizes my overview talk on software cloning analysis. It first discusses the notion of code cloning, types of clones, reasons, its consequences and analysis. It highlights Code Cloning in Extreme Programming Environment and finds Clone Detection as effective tool for Refactoring.