-
in Science by Splinters - the... with a VERY BADsentimentOverall mood: VERY BAD! Postitive adjectives found in the text: happy, good, modern. Negative adjectives found in the text: traumatic, troubled, poor. Most frequent adjectives: conventional, modern, better. Our semantic analysis measures the mood of a post and the author's perspective on a specific topic by analyzing the adjectives present in a text and weighing them appropriately. The purpose of this analysis is to understand how something is being talked about and does not imply a negative or positive judgment. For example, if something unpleasant happens to a celebrity the Sentiment for that post will probably be 'Very bad', but this does not imply that the author has a negative opinion of the person.
June 13, 2009 — and emotions of its characters rather than relying on narrative thrills, to show us what Barton Fink memorably termed ‘the life of the mind’. One need only look at the works of Ian McEwan or Paul Auster to see that contemporary fiction is...
-
in Science by Splinters - the... with a VERY BADsentimentOverall mood: VERY BAD! Postitive adjectives found in the text: happy, good, modern. Negative adjectives found in the text: traumatic, troubled, poor. Most frequent adjectives: conventional, modern, better. Our semantic analysis measures the mood of a post and the author's perspective on a specific topic by analyzing the adjectives present in a text and weighing them appropriately. The purpose of this analysis is to understand how something is being talked about and does not imply a negative or positive judgment. For example, if something unpleasant happens to a celebrity the Sentiment for that post will probably be 'Very bad', but this does not imply that the author has a negative opinion of the person.
June 13, 2009 — and emotions of its characters rather than relying on narrative thrills, to show us what Barton Fink memorably termed ‘the life of the mind’. One need only look at the works of Ian McEwan or Paul Auster to see that contemporary fiction is...
-
in Science by Splinters - the... with a VERY BADsentimentOverall mood: VERY BAD! Postitive adjectives found in the text: happy, good, modern. Negative adjectives found in the text: traumatic, troubled, poor. Most frequent adjectives: conventional, modern, better. Our semantic analysis measures the mood of a post and the author's perspective on a specific topic by analyzing the adjectives present in a text and weighing them appropriately. The purpose of this analysis is to understand how something is being talked about and does not imply a negative or positive judgment. For example, if something unpleasant happens to a celebrity the Sentiment for that post will probably be 'Very bad', but this does not imply that the author has a negative opinion of the person.
June 13, 2009 — and emotions of its characters rather than relying on narrative thrills, to show us what Barton Fink memorably termed ‘the life of the mind’. One need only look at the works of Ian McEwan or Paul Auster to see that contemporary fiction is...
-
in Science by Splinters - the... with a VERY BADsentimentOverall mood: VERY BAD! Postitive adjectives found in the text: happy, good, modern. Negative adjectives found in the text: traumatic, troubled, poor. Most frequent adjectives: conventional, modern, better. Our semantic analysis measures the mood of a post and the author's perspective on a specific topic by analyzing the adjectives present in a text and weighing them appropriately. The purpose of this analysis is to understand how something is being talked about and does not imply a negative or positive judgment. For example, if something unpleasant happens to a celebrity the Sentiment for that post will probably be 'Very bad', but this does not imply that the author has a negative opinion of the person.
June 13, 2009 — and emotions of its characters rather than relying on narrative thrills, to show us what Barton Fink memorably termed ‘the life of the mind’. One need only look at the works of Ian McEwan or Paul Auster to see that contemporary fiction is...
-
in Science by Splinters - the... with a VERY BADsentimentOverall mood: VERY BAD! Postitive adjectives found in the text: happy, good, modern. Negative adjectives found in the text: traumatic, troubled, poor. Most frequent adjectives: conventional, modern, better. Our semantic analysis measures the mood of a post and the author's perspective on a specific topic by analyzing the adjectives present in a text and weighing them appropriately. The purpose of this analysis is to understand how something is being talked about and does not imply a negative or positive judgment. For example, if something unpleasant happens to a celebrity the Sentiment for that post will probably be 'Very bad', but this does not imply that the author has a negative opinion of the person.
June 13, 2009 — and emotions of its characters rather than relying on narrative thrills, to show us what Barton Fink memorably termed ‘the life of the mind’. One need only look at the works of Ian McEwan or Paul Auster to see that contemporary fiction is...
-
in Science by Splinters - the... with a VERY BADsentimentOverall mood: VERY BAD! Postitive adjectives found in the text: happy, good, modern. Negative adjectives found in the text: traumatic, troubled, poor. Most frequent adjectives: conventional, modern, better. Our semantic analysis measures the mood of a post and the author's perspective on a specific topic by analyzing the adjectives present in a text and weighing them appropriately. The purpose of this analysis is to understand how something is being talked about and does not imply a negative or positive judgment. For example, if something unpleasant happens to a celebrity the Sentiment for that post will probably be 'Very bad', but this does not imply that the author has a negative opinion of the person.
June 13, 2009 — and emotions of its characters rather than relying on narrative thrills, to show us what Barton Fink memorably termed ‘the life of the mind’. One need only look at the works of Ian McEwan or Paul Auster to see that contemporary fiction is...
-
in Science by Splinters - the... with a VERY BADsentimentOverall mood: VERY BAD! Postitive adjectives found in the text: happy, good, modern. Negative adjectives found in the text: traumatic, troubled, poor. Most frequent adjectives: conventional, modern, better. Our semantic analysis measures the mood of a post and the author's perspective on a specific topic by analyzing the adjectives present in a text and weighing them appropriately. The purpose of this analysis is to understand how something is being talked about and does not imply a negative or positive judgment. For example, if something unpleasant happens to a celebrity the Sentiment for that post will probably be 'Very bad', but this does not imply that the author has a negative opinion of the person.
June 13, 2009 — and emotions of its characters rather than relying on narrative thrills, to show us what Barton Fink memorably termed ‘the life of the mind’. One need only look at the works of Ian McEwan or Paul Auster to see that contemporary fiction is...
-
in Science by Splinters - the... with a VERY BADsentimentOverall mood: VERY BAD! Postitive adjectives found in the text: happy, good, modern. Negative adjectives found in the text: traumatic, troubled, poor. Most frequent adjectives: conventional, modern, better. Our semantic analysis measures the mood of a post and the author's perspective on a specific topic by analyzing the adjectives present in a text and weighing them appropriately. The purpose of this analysis is to understand how something is being talked about and does not imply a negative or positive judgment. For example, if something unpleasant happens to a celebrity the Sentiment for that post will probably be 'Very bad', but this does not imply that the author has a negative opinion of the person.
June 13, 2009 — and emotions of its characters rather than relying on narrative thrills, to show us what Barton Fink memorably termed ‘the life of the mind’. One need only look at the works of Ian McEwan or Paul Auster to see that contemporary fiction is...
-
in Science by Splinters - the... with a VERY BADsentimentOverall mood: VERY BAD! Postitive adjectives found in the text: happy, good, modern. Negative adjectives found in the text: traumatic, troubled, poor. Most frequent adjectives: conventional, modern, better. Our semantic analysis measures the mood of a post and the author's perspective on a specific topic by analyzing the adjectives present in a text and weighing them appropriately. The purpose of this analysis is to understand how something is being talked about and does not imply a negative or positive judgment. For example, if something unpleasant happens to a celebrity the Sentiment for that post will probably be 'Very bad', but this does not imply that the author has a negative opinion of the person.
June 13, 2009 — and emotions of its characters rather than relying on narrative thrills, to show us what Barton Fink memorably termed ‘the life of the mind’. One need only look at the works of Ian McEwan or Paul Auster to see that contemporary fiction is...
-
in Science by Splinters - the... with a VERY BADsentimentOverall mood: VERY BAD! Postitive adjectives found in the text: happy, good, modern. Negative adjectives found in the text: traumatic, troubled, poor. Most frequent adjectives: conventional, modern, better. Our semantic analysis measures the mood of a post and the author's perspective on a specific topic by analyzing the adjectives present in a text and weighing them appropriately. The purpose of this analysis is to understand how something is being talked about and does not imply a negative or positive judgment. For example, if something unpleasant happens to a celebrity the Sentiment for that post will probably be 'Very bad', but this does not imply that the author has a negative opinion of the person.
June 13, 2009 — and emotions of its characters rather than relying on narrative thrills, to show us what Barton Fink memorably termed ‘the life of the mind’. One need only look at the works of Ian McEwan or Paul Auster to see that contemporary fiction is...
-
in Science by Splinters - the... with a VERY BADsentimentOverall mood: VERY BAD! Postitive adjectives found in the text: happy, good, modern. Negative adjectives found in the text: traumatic, troubled, poor. Most frequent adjectives: conventional, modern, better. Our semantic analysis measures the mood of a post and the author's perspective on a specific topic by analyzing the adjectives present in a text and weighing them appropriately. The purpose of this analysis is to understand how something is being talked about and does not imply a negative or positive judgment. For example, if something unpleasant happens to a celebrity the Sentiment for that post will probably be 'Very bad', but this does not imply that the author has a negative opinion of the person.
June 13, 2009 — and emotions of its characters rather than relying on narrative thrills, to show us what Barton Fink memorably termed ‘the life of the mind’. One need only look at the works of Ian McEwan or Paul Auster to see that contemporary fiction is...
-
in Science by Splinters - the... with a VERY BADsentimentOverall mood: VERY BAD! Postitive adjectives found in the text: happy, good, modern. Negative adjectives found in the text: traumatic, troubled, poor. Most frequent adjectives: conventional, modern, better. Our semantic analysis measures the mood of a post and the author's perspective on a specific topic by analyzing the adjectives present in a text and weighing them appropriately. The purpose of this analysis is to understand how something is being talked about and does not imply a negative or positive judgment. For example, if something unpleasant happens to a celebrity the Sentiment for that post will probably be 'Very bad', but this does not imply that the author has a negative opinion of the person.
June 13, 2009 — and emotions of its characters rather than relying on narrative thrills, to show us what Barton Fink memorably termed ‘the life of the mind’. One need only look at the works of Ian McEwan or Paul Auster to see that contemporary fiction is...
-
in Science by Splinters - the... with a VERY BADsentimentOverall mood: VERY BAD! Postitive adjectives found in the text: happy, good, modern. Negative adjectives found in the text: traumatic, troubled, poor. Most frequent adjectives: conventional, modern, better. Our semantic analysis measures the mood of a post and the author's perspective on a specific topic by analyzing the adjectives present in a text and weighing them appropriately. The purpose of this analysis is to understand how something is being talked about and does not imply a negative or positive judgment. For example, if something unpleasant happens to a celebrity the Sentiment for that post will probably be 'Very bad', but this does not imply that the author has a negative opinion of the person.
June 13, 2009 — and emotions of its characters rather than relying on narrative thrills, to show us what Barton Fink memorably termed ‘the life of the mind’. One need only look at the works of Ian McEwan or Paul Auster to see that contemporary fiction is...
-
in Science by Splinters - the... with a VERY BADsentimentOverall mood: VERY BAD! Postitive adjectives found in the text: happy, good, modern. Negative adjectives found in the text: traumatic, troubled, poor. Most frequent adjectives: conventional, modern, better. Our semantic analysis measures the mood of a post and the author's perspective on a specific topic by analyzing the adjectives present in a text and weighing them appropriately. The purpose of this analysis is to understand how something is being talked about and does not imply a negative or positive judgment. For example, if something unpleasant happens to a celebrity the Sentiment for that post will probably be 'Very bad', but this does not imply that the author has a negative opinion of the person.
June 13, 2009 — and emotions of its characters rather than relying on narrative thrills, to show us what Barton Fink memorably termed ‘the life of the mind’. One need only look at the works of Ian McEwan or Paul Auster to see that contemporary fiction is...
-
in Science by Splinters - the... with a VERY BADsentimentOverall mood: VERY BAD! Postitive adjectives found in the text: happy, good, modern. Negative adjectives found in the text: traumatic, troubled, poor. Most frequent adjectives: conventional, modern, better. Our semantic analysis measures the mood of a post and the author's perspective on a specific topic by analyzing the adjectives present in a text and weighing them appropriately. The purpose of this analysis is to understand how something is being talked about and does not imply a negative or positive judgment. For example, if something unpleasant happens to a celebrity the Sentiment for that post will probably be 'Very bad', but this does not imply that the author has a negative opinion of the person.
June 13, 2009 — and emotions of its characters rather than relying on narrative thrills, to show us what Barton Fink memorably termed ‘the life of the mind’. One need only look at the works of Ian McEwan or Paul Auster to see that contemporary fiction is...