24.3CLMay 20
Automated ICD Classification of Psychiatric Diagnoses: From Classical NLP to Large Language ModelsFernando Ortega, Raúl Lara-Cabrera, Jorge Dueñas-Lerín et al.
Mental health has become a global priority, leading to a massive administrative burden in the coding of clinical diagnoses. This study proposes the automation of psychiatric diagnostic analysis by mapping free-text descriptions to the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) using Natural Language Processing (NLP) and Machine Learning (ML) techniques. Utilizing a specialized dataset of 145,513 Spanish psychiatric descriptions, various text representation paradigms were evaluated, ranging from classical frequency-based models (BoW, TF-IDF) to state-of-the-art Large Language Models (LLMs) such as e5\_large, BioLORD, and Llama-3-8B. Results indicate that transformer-based embeddings consistently outperform traditional methods by capturing implicit semantic cues and nuanced medical terminology. The e5\_large model, through end-to-end fine-tuning, achieved the highest performance with a $F1_{micro}$ score of 0.866. This research demonstrates that adapting LLMs to specific clinical nomenclature is essential for overcoming the challenges of ``long-tail'' label distributions and the inherent ambiguity of psychiatric discourse.
CYNov 14, 2020
Passive detection of behavioral shifts for suicide attempt preventionPablo Moreno-Muñoz, Lorena Romero-Medrano, Ángela Moreno et al.
More than one million people commit suicide every year worldwide. The costs of daily cares, social stigma and treatment issues are still hard barriers to overcome in mental health. Most symptoms of mental disorders are related to the behavioral state of a patient, such as the mobility or social activity. Mobile-based technologies allow the passive collection of patients data, which supplements conventional assessments that rely on biased questionnaires and occasional medical appointments. In this work, we present a non-invasive machine learning (ML) model to detect behavioral shifts in psychiatric patients from unobtrusive data collected by a smartphone app. Our clinically validated results shed light on the idea of an early detection mobile tool for the task of suicide attempt prevention.
LGNov 6, 2019
Deep Sequential Models for Suicidal Ideation from Multiple Source DataIgnacio Peis, Pablo M. Olmos, Constanza Vera-Varela et al.
This article presents a novel method for predicting suicidal ideation from Electronic Health Records (EHR) and Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA) data using deep sequential models. Both EHR longitudinal data and EMA question forms are defined by asynchronous, variable length, randomly-sampled data sequences. In our method, we model each of them with a Recurrent Neural Network (RNN), and both sequences are aligned by concatenating the hidden state of each of them using temporal marks. Furthermore, we incorporate attention schemes to improve performance in long sequences and time-independent pre-trained schemes to cope with very short sequences. Using a database of 1023 patients, our experimental results show that the addition of EMA records boosts the system recall to predict the suicidal ideation diagnosis from 48.13% obtained exclusively from EHR-based state-of-the-art methods to 67.78%. Additionally, our method provides interpretability through the t-SNE representation of the latent space. Further, the most relevant input features are identified and interpreted medically.