Publication | Closed Access
Analysis of user-generated content from online social communities to characterise and predict depression degree
66
Citations
30
References
2017
Year
EngineeringMental HealthMultimodal Sentiment AnalysisCorpus LinguisticsSentiment AnalysisPsychologyText MiningSocial SciencesNatural Language ProcessingComputational Social ScienceSocial MediaData ScienceMood SymptomOnline CommunityAffective ComputingContent AnalysisMood TagEarly StageSocial Medium MiningSocial NetworksDepression DegreePsychiatryUser-generated ContentDepressionKnowledge DiscoveryProblematic Social Medium UseEmotion RecognitionSocial Medium DataPsychopathologyOnline Social Communities
The identification of a mental disorder at its early stages is a challenging task because it requires clinical interventions that may not be feasible in many cases. Social media such as online communities and blog posts have shown some promising features to help detect and characterise mental disorder at an early stage. In this work, we make use of user-generated content to identify depression and further characterise its degree of severity. We used the user-generated post contents and its associated mood tag to understand and differentiate the linguistic style and sentiments of the user content. We applied machine learning and statistical analysis methods to discriminate the depressive posts and communities from non-depressive ones. The depression degree of a depressed post is identified using variations of valence values based on the mood tag. The proposed methodology achieved 90%, 95% and 92% accuracy for the classification of depressive posts, depressive communities and depression degree, respectively.
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