• Title/Summary/Keyword: Depressive Discourse

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Understanding the Categories and Characteristics of Depressive Moods in Chatbot Data (챗봇 데이터에 나타난 우울 담론의 범주와 특성의 이해)

  • Chin, HyoJin;Jung, Chani;Baek, Gumhee;Cha, Chiyoung;Choi, Jeonghoi;Cha, Meeyoung
    • KIPS Transactions on Software and Data Engineering
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    • v.11 no.9
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    • pp.381-390
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    • 2022
  • Influenced by a culture that prefers non-face-to-face activity during the COVID-19 pandemic, chatbot usage is accelerating. Chatbots have been used for various purposes, not only for customer service in businesses and social conversations for fun but also for mental health. Chatbots are a platform where users can easily talk about their depressed moods because anonymity is guaranteed. However, most relevant research has been on social media data, especially Twitter data, and few studies have analyzed the commercially used chatbots data. In this study, we identified the characteristics of depressive discourse in user-chatbot interaction data by analyzing the chats, including the word 'depress,' using the topic modeling algorithm and the text-mining technique. Moreover, we compared its characteristics with those of the depressive moods in the Twitter data. Finally, we draw several design guidelines and suggest avenues for future research based on the study findings.

An Analysis of the Discourse Topics of Users who Exhibit Symptoms of Depression on Social Media (소셜미디어를 통한 우울 경향 이용자 담론 주제 분석)

  • Seo, Harim;Song, Min
    • Journal of the Korean Society for information Management
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    • v.36 no.4
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    • pp.207-226
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    • 2019
  • Depression is a serious psychological disease that is expected to afflict an increasing number of people. And studies on depression have been conducted in the context of social media because social media is a platform through which users often frankly express their emotions and often reveal their mental states. In this study, large amounts of Korean text were collected and analyzed to determine whether such data could be used to detect depression in users. This study analyzed data collected from Twitter users who had and did not have depressive tendencies between January 2016 and February 2019. The data for each user was separately analyzed before and after the appearance of depressive tendencies to see how their expression changed. In this study the data were analyzed through co-occurrence word analysis, topic modeling, and sentiment analysis. This study's automated data collection method enabled analyses of data collected over a relatively long period of time. Also it compared the textual characteristics of users with depressive tendencies to those without depressive tendencies.