Priya Sri, E.K. and Savita, K.S. and Zaffar, M. (2021) Depression Detection in Tweets from Urban Cities of Malaysia using Deep Learning. In: UNSPECIFIED.
Full text not available from this repository.Abstract
This document was inspired by how the usage of social media platforms in Malaysia such as Twitter have drastically increased ever since the recent Covid-19 pandemic. While practicing social distancing and other pandemic regulations was for the betterment and prevention of physical health, mental health of most was affected negatively. People generally revolve around with having interactions with other humans and once the physical form of it was cut, people tend to turn to social media. A twitter sentiment analysis approach was used to find the casual link between social media and mental health. This project aims to utilise the broaden scope of social media-based mental health measures since research proves the evidence of a link between depression and specific linguistic features as well. Therefore, the research entails on how the problem statement of this project on developing an algorithm that can predict text- based depression symptoms using deep learning and Natural Language Processing (NLP) can be achieved. The objective of the project is to identify depressive tweets using NLP and Deep Learning in the urban cities of Malaysia within the beginning of the Covid-19 period to enable individuals, their caregivers, parents, and even medical professionals to identify the linguistic clues that point towards to signs of mental health deterioration. Additionally, this paper also researches to make the proposed system to identify words that represent depression and categorize them accordingly as well as improve the accuracy of the system in identifying tweets that display the depression related words based on its specific location. This objective will be achieved following the methodology using the Deep Learning approach and Natural Language Processing technique. A recurrent neural network approach was implemented in this project known as the Long-Term Short Memory, which is a form of advanced RNN, that allows information to be preserved. Conducting an analysis on the linguistic indicators from tweets allows for a low-profile assessment that can supplement traditional services which then consequently would allow for a much earlier detection of depressive symptoms. Since this research entails on finding the link between tweets and machine learning's ability to detect depressive symptoms, the success this project brings forth a meaningful help towards those who are mentally affected but are unable to seek help or are unsure on diagnosing themselves as this project helps alert the government and psychologist on the need for it. The project thus far has an accuracy rate of 94, along with, precision rate of 0.94, recall of 0.96 and an F1 score of 0.95. © 2021 IEEE.
Item Type: | Conference or Workshop Item (UNSPECIFIED) |
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Impact Factor: | cited By 0 |
Uncontrolled Keywords: | Deterioration; Diagnosis; Learning algorithms; Linguistics; Recurrent neural networks; Social networking (online), Deep learning; Depressive symptom; Machine-learning; Malaysia; Mental health; Physical health; Sentiment analysis; Social media; Social media platforms; Urban cities, Sentiment analysis |
Depositing User: | Ms Sharifah Fahimah Saiyed Yeop |
Date Deposited: | 25 Mar 2022 01:33 |
Last Modified: | 25 Mar 2022 01:33 |
URI: | http://scholars.utp.edu.my/id/eprint/29314 |