A Text-Inception-Based Natural Language Processing Model for Sentiment Analysis of Drug Experiences

Author:

Swaileh A. Alzaidi Muhammad1ORCID,Alshammari Alya2ORCID,Almanea Manar3ORCID,Al-khawaja Haneen A.4ORCID,Al Sultan Hanan5ORCID,Alotaibi Shoayee6ORCID,Almukadi Wafa7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of English Language, College of Language Sciences,, King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

2. Department of Applied Linguistics, College of Languages,, Princess Nora bint Abdul Rahman University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

3. Department of English, College of Languages and Translation,, Imam Muhammad Ibn Saud Islamic University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

4. Applied Science Private University, Amman, Jordan

5. Department of English, College of Arts,, King Faisal University, Al-Ahsa, Saudi Arabia

6. Department of Artificial Intelligence and Data Science? College of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Hail, Hail, Saudi Arabia

7. Department of Software Engineering, College of Engineering and computer Science,, Jeddah University, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia

Abstract

The study of sentiment in Natural Language Processing (NLP) is among the most successful research areas because of the availability of millions of user opinions online since the turn of the century. The economic, political, and medical fields are just some of the many that have benefited from studies of sentiment research. While numerous studies have examined more mainstream topics like consumer electronics, movies, and restaurants, relatively few have examined health and medical concerns. Considerable insight into where to direct efforts to improve public health might be gained by a study of how people feel about healthcare as a whole and of individual drug experiences in particular. When it comes to medicine, automatic analysis of online user evaluations paves the way for sifting through massive amounts of user feedback to find information regarding medications' efficacy and side effects that might be used to enhance pharmacovigilance programs. Simple rules-based methods have given way to more complex machine learning approaches like deep learning, which is developing as a technology for many natural language processing jobs. The opensource datasets have been analyzed with models that use word embeddings and term frequency-inverse document frequency (TF-IDF). A feature-enhanced text-inception model for sentiment classification was presented to work in tandem with this approach. The model first employed a cutting-edge text-inception module to glean useful shallow features from the text. K-MaxPooling was subsequently employed to reduce the dimensionality of its shallow and deep includes as well as enhance the generalization of characteristics, and a deep feature extraction module was formed using the bidirectional gated recurrent unit (Bi-GRU) and the capsule neural network to comprehend the text's semantic data. By combining traditional methods with cutting-edge artificial intelligence techniques, this hybrid approach can revolutionize public health initiatives, decision-making, and pharmacovigilance in the healthcare industry. This model achieved an exceptional accuracy rate of 99%, underscoring its effectiveness in sentiment classification and demonstrating its potential to significantly contribute to advancing healthcare and medical research.

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

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