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Abstract
Our emotions and sentiments are influenced by naturalistic stimuli such as the movies we watch and the songs we listen to, accompanied by changes in our brain activation. Comprehension of these brain-activation dynamics can assist in identification of any associated neurological condition such as stress and depression, leading towards making informed decision about suitable stimuli. A large number of open-access functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) datasets collected under naturalistic conditions can be used for classification/prediction studies. However, these datasets do not provide emotion/sentiment labels, which limits their use in supervised learning studies. Manual labeling by subjects can generate these labels, however, this method is subjective and biased. In this study, we are proposing another approach of generating automatic labels from the naturalistic stimulus itself. We are using sentiment analyzers (VADER, TextBlob, and Flair) from natural language processing to generate labels using movie subtitles. Subtitles generated labels are used as the class labels for positive, negative, and neutral sentiments for classification of brain fMRI images. Support vector machine, random forest, decision tree, and deep neural network classifiers are used. We are getting reasonably good classification accuracy (42–84%) for imbalanced data, which is increased (55–99%) for balanced data.
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1 Institute of Space Technology, Islamabad, Pakistan (GRID:grid.444792.8) (ISNI:0000 0004 0607 4078)
2 Institute of Space Technology, Islamabad, Pakistan (GRID:grid.444792.8) (ISNI:0000 0004 0607 4078); Brno University of Technology, Faculty of Information Technology, Brno, Czech Republic (GRID:grid.4994.0) (ISNI:0000 0001 0118 0988); Monash University, Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health, Melbourne, Australia (GRID:grid.1002.3) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 7857)
3 Brno University of Technology, Faculty of Information Technology, Brno, Czech Republic (GRID:grid.4994.0) (ISNI:0000 0001 0118 0988)