Widespread Worry and the Stock Market

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This a Paper for Social Media Analysis 10-802 in Fall 2012.

Citation

Gilbert, E. and Karahalios, K., Widespread worry and the stock market, 2010, In Proceedings of the international conference on weblogs and social media (ICWSM 10),

Online version

Widespread worry and the stock market

Summary

This paper attempts to find correlations between LiveJournal blog post sentiment and S&P 500 stock market changes, using opinion mining. The authors used supervised learning techniques to classify posts in a binary fashion into sets of *anxiety posts* and *not anxious posts*. The classifiers used had low recall (28% and 32%), but high precision, with false positive rates of 3% and 6%. Thus, the classifiers were conservative in assigning posts to the anxious class.

Using the classifier labeled posts, an **Anxiety index** was created by taking the fraction of of anxious posts per day and taking the difference of the logarithm of such values for two consecutive days. This anxiety time series was compared to the S&P 500 time series, where for the S&P data, the difference of consecutive log-returns was used, namely .

To evaluate if there existed correlation between the anxiety index and the S&P 500 data, the authors turned to Granger Causality, which is a statistical hypothesis test for determining whether one time series is useful for forecasting another.

Results

The authors found, in one instance, a significant

Discussion

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