<p>Mental health disorders may cause severe consequences on all the countries’ economies and health. For example, the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, such as isolation and travel ban, can make us feel depressed. Identifying early signs of mental health disorders is vital. For example, depression may increase an individual’s risk of suicide. The state-of-the-art research in identifying mental disorder patterns from textual data, uses hand-labelled training sets, especially when a domain expert’s knowledge is required to analyse various symptoms. This task could be time-consuming and expensive. To address this challenge, in this dissertation, we study and analyse the various clinical and non-clinical approaches to identifying mental health disorders. We leverage the domain knowledge and expertise in cognitive science to build a domain-specific Knowledge Base (KB) for the mental health disorder concepts and patterns. We present a weaker form of supervision by facilitating the generating of training data from a domain-specific Knowledge Base (KB). We adopt a typical scenario for analysing social media to identify major depressive disorder symptoms from the textual content generated by social users. We use this scenario to evaluate how our knowledge-based approach significantly improves the quality of results.</p>
History
Table of Contents
1 Introduction -- 2 Background and state-of-the-art -- 3 Method -- 4 Evaluation and experiment -- 5 Conclusion and future work -- A Appendix -- References
Notes
A thesis submitted to Macquarie University for the degree of Master of Research
Awarding Institution
Macquarie University
Degree Type
Thesis MRes
Degree
Thesis MRes, Macquarie University, School of Computing, 2022
Department, Centre or School
School of Computing
Year of Award
2022
Principal Supervisor
Amin Beheshti
Additional Supervisor 1
Amin Khatami
Rights
Copyright: The Author
Copyright disclaimer: https://www.mq.edu.au/copyright-disclaimer