Deakin University
Browse
razzak-explainabledepression-2022.pdf (1.83 MB)

Explainable depression detection with multi-aspect features using a hybrid deep learning model on social media

Download (1.83 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2022-01-01, 00:00 authored by H Zogan, Imran RazzakImran Razzak, X Wang, S Jameel, G Xu
The ability to explain why the model produced results in such a way is an important problem, especially in the medical domain. Model explainability is important for building trust by providing insight into the model prediction. However, most existing machine learning methods provide no explainability, which is worrying. For instance, in the task of automatic depression prediction, most machine learning models lead to predictions that are obscure to humans. In this work, we propose explainable Multi-Aspect Depression Detection with Hierarchical Attention Network MDHAN, for automatic detection of depressed users on social media and explain the model prediction. We have considered user posts augmented with additional features from Twitter. Specifically, we encode user posts using two levels of attention mechanisms applied at the tweet-level and word-level, calculate each tweet and words’ importance, and capture semantic sequence features from the user timelines (posts). Our hierarchical attention model is developed in such a way that it can capture patterns that leads to explainable results. Our experiments show that MDHAN outperforms several popular and robust baseline methods, demonstrating the effectiveness of combining deep learning with multi-aspect features. We also show that our model helps improve predictive performance when detecting depression in users who are posting messages publicly on social media. MDHAN achieves excellent performance and ensures adequate evidence to explain the prediction.

History

Journal

World Wide Web

Volume

25

Pagination

281 - 304

Publisher

Springer

Location

Berlin, Germany

ISSN

1386-145X

eISSN

1573-1413

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal