user tweet
NarrationDep: Narratives on Social Media For Automatic Depression Detection
Zogan, Hamad, Razzak, Imran, Jameel, Shoaib, Xu, Guandong
Social media posts provide valuable insight into the narrative of users and their intentions, including providing an opportunity to automatically model whether a social media user is depressed or not. The challenge lies in faithfully modelling user narratives from their online social media posts, which could potentially be useful in several different applications. We have developed a novel and effective model called \texttt{NarrationDep}, which focuses on detecting narratives associated with depression. By analyzing a user's tweets, \texttt{NarrationDep} accurately identifies crucial narratives. \texttt{NarrationDep} is a deep learning framework that jointly models individual user tweet representations and clusters of users' tweets. As a result, \texttt{NarrationDep} is characterized by a novel two-layer deep learning model: the first layer models using social media text posts, and the second layer learns semantic representations of tweets associated with a cluster. To faithfully model these cluster representations, the second layer incorporates a novel component that hierarchically learns from users' posts. The results demonstrate that our framework outperforms other comparative models including recently developed models on a variety of datasets.
Mukta
We propose a novel technique to predict a user's movie genre preference from her psycholinguistic attributes obtained from user social media interactions. In particular, we build machine learning based classification models that take user tweets as input to derive her psychological attributes: personality and value scores, and gives her movie genre preference as output. We train these models using user tweets in Twitter, and her reviews and ratings of movies of different genres in Internet movie database (IMDb). We exploit a key concept of psychology, i.e., an individual's personality and values may influence her choice in performing different actions in real life. We have investigated how personality and values independently and collectively influence a user preference on different movie genres. Our proposed model can be used for recommending movies to social media users.