MAXWELL SARPONG (@maxwellsarpong)
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    9
  • Global Rank 1,034,169 (Top 36 %)
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  • Following 13
  • Registered about 8 years ago
  • Most used languages
    Java
    33.3 %
  • Location πŸ‡¬πŸ‡­ Ghana
  • Country Total Rank 576
  • Country Ranking
    Java
    215

Top repositories

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NLP-financial-text-processing-dataset

The key arguments for the low utilization of statistical techniques in financial sentiment analysis have been the difficulty of implementation for practical applications and the lack of high quality training data for building such models. Especially in the case of finance and economic texts, annotated collections are a scarce resource and many are reserved for proprietary use only. To resolve the missing training data problem, we present a collection of ∼ 5000 sentences to establish human-annotated standards for benchmarking alternative modeling techniques. The objective of the phrase level annotation task was to classify each example sentence into a positive, negative or neutral category by considering only the information explicitly available in the given sentence. Since the study is focused only on financial and economic domains, the annotators were asked to consider the sentences from the view point of an investor only; i.e. whether the news may have positive, negative or neutral influence on the stock price. As a result, sentences which have a sentiment that is not relevant from an economic or financial perspective are considered neutral.
Jupyter Notebook
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2

CSWEB

This app was built with CSpro for data collection
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Introduction-to-Java-

Java is a programming language and computing platform first released by Sun Microsystems in 1995. ... Java is fast, secure, and reliable. From laptops to datacenters, game consoles to scientific supercomputers, cell phones to the Internet, Java is everywhere!
Java
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IMDB_movies_sentiment_classification

This large dataset of movie reviews from the IMDb that has been collected by Maas and others (Learning Word Vectors for Sentiment Analysis, A. L. Maas, R. E. Daly, P. T. Pham, D. Huang, A. Y. Ng, and C. Potts, Proceedings of the 49th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technologies, pages 142–150, Portland, Oregon, USA, Association for Computational Linguistics, June 2011).
Jupyter Notebook
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