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Category-Aware Chronic Stress Detection on Microblogs.
IEEE J Biomed Health Inform ; 26(2): 852-864, 2022 02.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34143747
People today live a stressful life. Compared with acute stress, long-term chronic stress is more harmful, and may cause or exacerbate many serious health problems, including high blood pressure, heart disease, chronic pain, and mental diseases. With social media becoming an integral part of our daily lives for information sharing and self-expression, detecting category-aware long-standing chronic stress from a large volume of historic open posts made by social media users is possible. In this study, we construct a data set containing 971 chronically stressed users with totally 54 546 open posts on Sina microblog from July 5, 2018 to December 1, 2019, and design two techniques for category-aware chronic stress detection: (1) a stress-oriented word embedding on the basis of an existing pre-trained word embedding, aiming to strengthen the sensibility of stress-related expressions for linguistic post analysis; (2) a multi-attention model with three layers (i.e., category-attention layer, posts self-attention layer, and category-specific post attention layer), aiming to capture inter-relevance from a sequence of posts and infer long-term stress categories and stress levels. The experimental results show that the proposed multi-attention model equipped with the stress-oriented word embedding can achieve 80.65% accuracy in detecting category-aware stress levels, 86.49% accuracy in detecting chronic stress levels only, and 93.07% accuracy in detecting chronic stress categories only. Limitations and implications of the study are also discussed at the end of the paper.
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Texto completo: 1 Colección: 01-internacional Base de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Medios de Comunicación Sociales Tipo de estudio: Diagnostic_studies / Prognostic_studies Límite: Humans Idioma: En Revista: IEEE J Biomed Health Inform Año: 2022 Tipo del documento: Article Pais de publicación: Estados Unidos

Texto completo: 1 Colección: 01-internacional Base de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Medios de Comunicación Sociales Tipo de estudio: Diagnostic_studies / Prognostic_studies Límite: Humans Idioma: En Revista: IEEE J Biomed Health Inform Año: 2022 Tipo del documento: Article Pais de publicación: Estados Unidos