TY - JOUR
T1 - Sharing emotions
T2 - determining films’ evoked emotional experience from their online reviews
AU - Mokryn, Osnat
AU - Bodoff, David
AU - Bader, Nadim
AU - Albo, Yael
AU - Lanir, Joel
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020, Springer Nature B.V.
PY - 2020/10/1
Y1 - 2020/10/1
N2 - Online reviews are broadly believed to reflect consumers’ opinions towards the reviewed items. In this work, we postulate that online reviews for experience goods also reflect something very different, the reviewer’s emotions while experiencing the item. We study the case of films, which are made with the intent of evoking an emotional response. We postulate that the emotions that the viewer experienced while watching the movie are reflected in their online review, and can be reliably extracted from it. We aggregate these emotional experiences to create an emotional signature for the film—the emotions that it tends to evoke in viewers. We conduct a series of validations, each designed to offer evidence that the emotional signature indeed reflects the emotions that the film evokes in viewers. Our results demonstrate that experience goods’ online reviews can be utilized for extracting and understanding users’ emotional experience. Items’ induced emotions can be used in affective recommender systems and affective multimedia retrieval. In addition, users’ ability to easily see in advance the emotions that the item has induced in others, is relevant for research on the effect of expected emotions on decision-making.
AB - Online reviews are broadly believed to reflect consumers’ opinions towards the reviewed items. In this work, we postulate that online reviews for experience goods also reflect something very different, the reviewer’s emotions while experiencing the item. We study the case of films, which are made with the intent of evoking an emotional response. We postulate that the emotions that the viewer experienced while watching the movie are reflected in their online review, and can be reliably extracted from it. We aggregate these emotional experiences to create an emotional signature for the film—the emotions that it tends to evoke in viewers. We conduct a series of validations, each designed to offer evidence that the emotional signature indeed reflects the emotions that the film evokes in viewers. Our results demonstrate that experience goods’ online reviews can be utilized for extracting and understanding users’ emotional experience. Items’ induced emotions can be used in affective recommender systems and affective multimedia retrieval. In addition, users’ ability to easily see in advance the emotions that the item has induced in others, is relevant for research on the effect of expected emotions on decision-making.
KW - Emotions
KW - Experience goods
KW - Movies
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85084499617&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s10791-020-09373-1
DO - 10.1007/s10791-020-09373-1
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AN - SCOPUS:85084499617
SN - 1386-4564
VL - 23
SP - 475
EP - 501
JO - Information Retrieval Journal
JF - Information Retrieval Journal
IS - 5
ER -