Maryna Nyzova

Work place: Information Systems and Networks Department, Lviv Polytechnic National University, Lviv, 79013, Ukraine

E-mail: maryna.nyzova.sa.2021@lpnu.ua

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Research Interests:

Biography

Maryna Nyzova is an undergraduate student at Lviv National Polytechnic University, majoring in Data Science within the Information Systems and Networks department. Her academic interests focus on natural language processing, with a strong inclination toward research in this field.

Author Articles
Smart Tool for Text Content Analysis to Identify Key Propaganda Narratives and Disinformation in News Based on NLP and Machine Learning

By Maryna Nyzova Victoria Vysotska Lyubomyr Chyrun Zhengbing Hu Yuriy Ushenko Dmytro Uhryn

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5815/ijcnis.2025.04.08, Pub. Date: 8 Aug. 2025

The paper presents the development of a smart tool for automated analysis of news text content in order to identify propaganda narratives and disinformation. The relevance of the project is due to the growth of the information threat in the context of a hybrid war, in particular in the Ukrainian information space. The proposed solution is implemented in the form of a browser plugin that provides instant analysis of content without the need to switch to third-party services. The methodology is based on the use of modern natural language processing (NLP) and deep learning methods (in particular, BERT models) to classify content according to the level of propaganda impact and identify key narratives. As part of the study, modern models of transformers for text analysis, in particular BERT, were used. For the task of classifying propaganda, pre-trained GloVe vectors optimised for news articles were used, which provided the best results among the options considered. Instead, the BERT model was used to classify narratives, which showed higher accuracy in the processing of texts reflecting subjective thoughts. The adaptation included the use of a multilingual version of BERT (multilingual BERT), as it allows you to effectively work with Ukrainian-language data, which is a key advantage for localised analysis in the context of information warfare. Before using BERT, pre-processing of texts was carried out with the addition of syntactic, punctuation, emotional and stylistic features, which increased the accuracy of classification. For a more complete and reliable assessment of the effectiveness of propaganda classification models and narratives, a set of key metrics was used for propaganda/ narratives analyses Accuracy (0.94/0.86), Precision (0.95/0.69), Recall (0.96/0.71) and F1-score (0.96/0.70).The developed model showed high accuracy results: the F1-score for the propaganda classification problem was 0.96 and for the narrative classification problem – 0.70, which significantly exceeds the results of similar approaches, in particular XGBoost (0.92 and 0.50, respectively). In addition, the system supports full-fledged work with Ukrainian-language content, which is its key competitive advantage. The practical application of the tool covers journalism, fact-checking, analytics, and improving media literacy among citizens, contributing to the improvement of the state's information security.

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