Maintenance Notice

Due to necessary scheduled maintenance, the JMIR Publications website will be unavailable from Wednesday, July 01, 2020 at 8:00 PM to 10:00 PM EST. We apologize in advance for any inconvenience this may cause you.

Who will be affected?

Accepted for/Published in: Journal of Medical Internet Research

Date Submitted: Nov 28, 2020
Date Accepted: May 4, 2021

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Distant Supervision for Mental Health Management in Social Media: Suicide Risk Classification System Development Study

Fu G, Song C, Li J, Ma Y, Chen P, Wang R, Yang B, Huang Z

Distant Supervision for Mental Health Management in Social Media: Suicide Risk Classification System Development Study

J Med Internet Res 2021;23(8):e26119

DOI: 10.2196/26119

PMID: 34435964

PMCID: 8416081

Distant Supervision for Mental Health Management in Social Media

  • Guanghui Fu; 
  • Changwei Song; 
  • Jianqiang Li; 
  • Yue Ma; 
  • Pan Chen; 
  • Ruiqian Wang; 
  • Bingxiang Yang; 
  • Zhisheng Huang

ABSTRACT

Background:

Online social media provides common people with a platform to express their emotions conveniently and anonymously. There have been nearly two million messages in a particular Chinese social media data source with several thousand more each day, which becomes impossible to analyze manually. However, it has been identified as an important data source for suicide prevention related to depression disorder.

Objective:

We propose in this paper a distant supervision approach to achieve a system that can automatically identify textual comments at high suicide risk.

Methods:

To avoid expensive manual data annotations, we first explore a knowledge graph method to produce approximate annotations for distant supervision, based on which a deep learning architecture is built and refined by the interactions with psychology experts. There are three annotation levels: free annotations (zero cost), easy annotations (by psychology students), and hard annotations (by psychology experts).

Results:

Our system is evaluated accordingly and shown that the performance at each level is promising. Combined with several significant psychology features from user blogs, we obtained 80.75% Precision, 75.41% Recall and 77.98% F1 score for the hardest test data.

Conclusions:

In this paper, we proposed a distant supervision approach to achieve an automatic system that can classify high/low suicide risk of social media comments. The model can therefore provide volunteers with early warnings to prevent social media users from committing suicide.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Fu G, Song C, Li J, Ma Y, Chen P, Wang R, Yang B, Huang Z

Distant Supervision for Mental Health Management in Social Media: Suicide Risk Classification System Development Study

J Med Internet Res 2021;23(8):e26119

DOI: 10.2196/26119

PMID: 34435964

PMCID: 8416081

Download PDF


Request queued. Please wait while the file is being generated. It may take some time.

© The authors. All rights reserved. This is a privileged document currently under peer-review/community review (or an accepted/rejected manuscript). Authors have provided JMIR Publications with an exclusive license to publish this preprint on it's website for review and ahead-of-print citation purposes only. While the final peer-reviewed paper may be licensed under a cc-by license on publication, at this stage authors and publisher expressively prohibit redistribution of this draft paper other than for review purposes.