CVAIAug 5, 2024

Target-Dependent Multimodal Sentiment Analysis Via Employing Visual-to Emotional-Caption Translation Network using Visual-Caption Pairs

arXiv:2408.10248v11 citationsh-index: 33
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

It addresses the challenge of integrating visual emotional cues for more accurate sentiment analysis in multimodal social media posts, representing an incremental improvement over existing methods.

This paper tackles the problem of target-dependent multimodal sentiment analysis by proposing a Visual-to-Emotional-Caption Translation Network (VECTN) to incorporate facial expression clues from images, achieving accuracies of 81.23% and 77.42% on Twitter-2015 and Twitter-2017 datasets, respectively.

The natural language processing and multimedia field has seen a notable surge in interest in multimodal sentiment recognition. Hence, this study aims to employ Target-Dependent Multimodal Sentiment Analysis (TDMSA) to identify the level of sentiment associated with every target (aspect) stated within a multimodal post consisting of a visual-caption pair. Despite the recent advancements in multimodal sentiment recognition, there has been a lack of explicit incorporation of emotional clues from the visual modality, specifically those pertaining to facial expressions. The challenge at hand is to proficiently obtain visual and emotional clues and subsequently synchronise them with the textual content. In light of this fact, this study presents a novel approach called the Visual-to-Emotional-Caption Translation Network (VECTN) technique. The primary objective of this strategy is to effectively acquire visual sentiment clues by analysing facial expressions. Additionally, it effectively aligns and blends the obtained emotional clues with the target attribute of the caption mode. The experimental findings demonstrate that our methodology is capable of producing ground-breaking outcomes when applied to two publicly accessible multimodal Twitter datasets, namely, Twitter-2015 and Twitter-2017. The experimental results show that the suggested model achieves an accuracy of 81.23% and a macro-F1 of 80.61% on the Twitter-15 dataset, while 77.42% and 75.19% on the Twitter-17 dataset, respectively. The observed improvement in performance reveals that our model is better than others when it comes to collecting target-level sentiment in multimodal data using the expressions of the face.

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