CLNov 8, 2022
A Multimodal Approach for Dementia Detection from Spontaneous Speech with Tensor Fusion LayerLoukas Ilias, Dimitris Askounis, John Psarras
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a progressive neurological disorder, meaning that the symptoms develop gradually throughout the years. It is also the main cause of dementia, which affects memory, thinking skills, and mental abilities. Nowadays, researchers have moved their interest towards AD detection from spontaneous speech, since it constitutes a time-effective procedure. However, existing state-of-the-art works proposing multimodal approaches do not take into consideration the inter- and intra-modal interactions and propose early and late fusion approaches. To tackle these limitations, we propose deep neural networks, which can be trained in an end-to-end trainable way and capture the inter- and intra-modal interactions. Firstly, each audio file is converted to an image consisting of three channels, i.e., log-Mel spectrogram, delta, and delta-delta. Next, each transcript is passed through a BERT model followed by a gated self-attention layer. Similarly, each image is passed through a Swin Transformer followed by an independent gated self-attention layer. Acoustic features are extracted also from each audio file. Finally, the representation vectors from the different modalities are fed to a tensor fusion layer for capturing the inter-modal interactions. Extensive experiments conducted on the ADReSS Challenge dataset indicate that our introduced approaches obtain valuable advantages over existing research initiatives reaching Accuracy and F1-score up to 86.25% and 85.48% respectively.
LGFeb 12, 2023
Neural Architecture Search with Multimodal Fusion Methods for Diagnosing DementiaMichail Chatzianastasis, Loukas Ilias, Dimitris Askounis et al.
Alzheimer's dementia (AD) affects memory, thinking, and language, deteriorating person's life. An early diagnosis is very important as it enables the person to receive medical help and ensure quality of life. Therefore, leveraging spontaneous speech in conjunction with machine learning methods for recognizing AD patients has emerged into a hot topic. Most of the previous works employ Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs), to process the input signal. However, finding a CNN architecture is a time-consuming process and requires domain expertise. Moreover, the researchers introduce early and late fusion approaches for fusing different modalities or concatenate the representations of the different modalities during training, thus the inter-modal interactions are not captured. To tackle these limitations, first we exploit a Neural Architecture Search (NAS) method to automatically find a high performing CNN architecture. Next, we exploit several fusion methods, including Multimodal Factorized Bilinear Pooling and Tucker Decomposition, to combine both speech and text modalities. To the best of our knowledge, there is no prior work exploiting a NAS approach and these fusion methods in the task of dementia detection from spontaneous speech. We perform extensive experiments on the ADReSS Challenge dataset and show the effectiveness of our approach over state-of-the-art methods.
CLAug 28, 2023
Multimodal Detection of Bots on X (Twitter) using TransformersLoukas Ilias, Ioannis Michail Kazelidis, Dimitris Askounis
Although not all bots are malicious, the vast majority of them are responsible for spreading misinformation and manipulating the public opinion about several issues, i.e., elections and many more. Therefore, the early detection of bots is crucial. Although there have been proposed methods for detecting bots in social media, there are still substantial limitations. For instance, existing research initiatives still extract a large number of features and train traditional machine learning algorithms or use GloVe embeddings and train LSTMs. However, feature extraction is a tedious procedure demanding domain expertise. Also, language models based on transformers have been proved to be better than LSTMs. Other approaches create large graphs and train graph neural networks requiring in this way many hours for training and access to computational resources. To tackle these limitations, this is the first study employing only the user description field and images of three channels denoting the type and content of tweets posted by the users. Firstly, we create digital DNA sequences, transform them to 3d images, and apply pretrained models of the vision domain, including EfficientNet, AlexNet, VGG16, etc. Next, we propose a multimodal approach, where we use TwHIN-BERT for getting the textual representation of the user description field and employ VGG16 for acquiring the visual representation for the image modality. We propose three different fusion methods, namely concatenation, gated multimodal unit, and crossmodal attention, for fusing the different modalities and compare their performances. Finally, we present a qualitative analysis of the behavior of our best performing model. Extensive experiments conducted on the Cresci'17 and TwiBot-20 datasets demonstrate valuable advantages of our introduced approaches over state-of-the-art ones.
LGOct 6, 2022
Comparison of Missing Data Imputation Methods using the Framingham Heart study datasetKonstantinos Psychogyios, Loukas Ilias, Dimitris Askounis
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is a class of diseases that involve the heart or blood vessels and according to World Health Organization is the leading cause of death worldwide. EHR data regarding this case, as well as medical cases in general, contain missing values very frequently. The percentage of missingness may vary and is linked with instrument errors, manual data entry procedures, etc. Even though the missing rate is usually significant, in many cases the missing value imputation part is handled poorly either with case-deletion or with simple statistical approaches such as mode and median imputation. These methods are known to introduce significant bias, since they do not account for the relationships between the dataset's variables. Within the medical framework, many datasets consist of lab tests or patient medical tests, where these relationships are present and strong. To address these limitations, in this paper we test and modify state-of-the-art missing value imputation methods based on Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) and Autoencoders. The evaluation is accomplished for both the tasks of data imputation and post-imputation prediction. Regarding the imputation task, we achieve improvements of 0.20, 7.00% in normalised Root Mean Squared Error (RMSE) and Area Under the Receiver Operating Characteristic Curve (AUROC) respectively. In terms of the post-imputation prediction task, our models outperform the standard approaches by 2.50% in F1-score.
SDMay 25
A Multimodal Framework for Dementia Detection via Linguistic and Acoustic Representation LearningLoukas Ilias, Dimitris Askounis
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder and the leading cause of dementia, affecting memory, reasoning, communication, and daily functioning. Early diagnosis is particularly important, as timely intervention may help slow cognitive decline and improve patient care. Recent studies have demonstrated that spontaneous speech contains valuable linguistic and acoustic biomarkers associated with dementia. However, existing approaches often rely on independently trained modality-specific models, feature concatenation strategies, ensemble methods, or attention-based fusion mechanisms that do not explicitly maximize the dependency between speech and transcript representations. In this work, we propose a multimodal deep learning framework for automatic dementia detection that jointly exploits speech and transcript information in an end-to-end trainable manner. Specifically, speech recordings are divided into 10-second segments and passed through a pre-trained HuBERT model to extract contextualized acoustic representations. To better capture informative temporal speech characteristics, attentive statistics pooling is employed to aggregate frame-level acoustic embeddings. For the textual modality, transcripts are encoded using a pre-trained BERT model, where the [CLS] token representation is used as the linguistic embedding. The acoustic and textual representations are subsequently combined using an attention-based Audio-Text Fusion (AT-Fusion) mechanism. In addition, we introduce a MINE objective to maximize the mutual information between modalities and improve multimodal representation alignment. The fused multimodal representation is finally used for dementia classification. Experiments conducted on the publicly available ADReSS Challenge and PROCESS-2 dataset demonstrate the effectiveness and robustness of the proposed approach for speech-based dementia assessment.
CLSep 30, 2024
Depression detection in social media posts using transformer-based models and auxiliary featuresMarios Kerasiotis, Loukas Ilias, Dimitris Askounis
The detection of depression in social media posts is crucial due to the increasing prevalence of mental health issues. Traditional machine learning algorithms often fail to capture intricate textual patterns, limiting their effectiveness in identifying depression. Existing studies have explored various approaches to this problem but often fall short in terms of accuracy and robustness. To address these limitations, this research proposes a neural network architecture leveraging transformer-based models combined with metadata and linguistic markers. The study employs DistilBERT, extracting information from the last four layers of the transformer, applying learned weights, and averaging them to create a rich representation of the input text. This representation, augmented by metadata and linguistic markers, enhances the model's comprehension of each post. Dropout layers prevent overfitting, and a Multilayer Perceptron (MLP) is used for final classification. Data augmentation techniques, inspired by the Easy Data Augmentation (EDA) methods, are also employed to improve model performance. Using BERT, random insertion and substitution of phrases generate additional training data, focusing on balancing the dataset by augmenting underrepresented classes. The proposed model achieves weighted Precision, Recall, and F1-scores of 84.26%, 84.18%, and 84.15%, respectively. The augmentation techniques significantly enhance model performance, increasing the weighted F1-score from 72.59% to 84.15%.
CLOct 6, 2022
Explainable Verbal Deception Detection using TransformersLoukas Ilias, Felix Soldner, Bennett Kleinberg
People are regularly confronted with potentially deceptive statements (e.g., fake news, misleading product reviews, or lies about activities). Only few works on automated text-based deception detection have exploited the potential of deep learning approaches. A critique of deep-learning methods is their lack of interpretability, preventing us from understanding the underlying (linguistic) mechanisms involved in deception. However, recent advancements have made it possible to explain some aspects of such models. This paper proposes and evaluates six deep-learning models, including combinations of BERT (and RoBERTa), MultiHead Attention, co-attentions, and transformers. To understand how the models reach their decisions, we then examine the model's predictions with LIME. We then zoom in on vocabulary uniqueness and the correlation of LIWC categories with the outcome class (truthful vs deceptive). The findings suggest that our transformer-based models can enhance automated deception detection performances (+2.11% in accuracy) and show significant differences pertinent to the usage of LIWC features in truthful and deceptive statements.
LGDec 4, 2024
Convolutional Neural Networks and Mixture of Experts for Intrusion Detection in 5G Networks and beyondLoukas Ilias, George Doukas, Vangelis Lamprou et al.
The advent of 6G/NextG networks comes along with a series of benefits, including extreme capacity, reliability, and efficiency. However, these networks may become vulnerable to new security threats. Therefore, 6G/NextG networks must be equipped with advanced Artificial Intelligence algorithms, in order to evade these attacks. Existing studies on the intrusion detection task rely on the train of shallow machine learning classifiers, including Logistic Regression, Decision Trees, and so on, yielding suboptimal performance. Others are based on deep neural networks consisting of static components, which are not conditional on the input. This limits their representation power and efficiency. To resolve these issues, we present the first study integrating Mixture of Experts (MoE) for identifying malicious traffic. Specifically, we use network traffic data and convert the 1D array of features into a 2D matrix. Next, we pass this matrix through convolutional neural network (CNN) layers followed by batch normalization and max pooling layers. After obtaining the representation vector via the CNN layers, a sparsely gated MoE layer is used. This layer consists of a set of experts (dense layers) and a router, where the router assigns weights to the output of each expert. Sparsity is achieved by choosing the most relevant experts of the total ones. Finally, we perform a series of ablation experiments to prove the effectiveness of our proposed model. Experiments are conducted on the 5G-NIDD dataset, a network intrusion detection dataset generated from a real 5G test network. Results show that our introduced approach reaches weighted F1-score up to 99.95% achieving comparable performance to existing approaches. Findings also show that our proposed model achieves multiple advantages over state-of-the-art approaches.
LGNov 25, 2024
A Graph Neural Architecture Search Approach for Identifying Bots in Social MediaGeorgios Tzoumanekas, Michail Chatzianastasis, Loukas Ilias et al.
Social media platforms, including X, Facebook, and Instagram, host millions of daily users, giving rise to bots-automated programs disseminating misinformation and ideologies with tangible real-world consequences. While bot detection in platform X has been the area of many deep learning models with adequate results, most approaches neglect the graph structure of social media relationships and often rely on hand-engineered architectures. Our work introduces the implementation of a Neural Architecture Search (NAS) technique, namely Deep and Flexible Graph Neural Architecture Search (DFG-NAS), tailored to Relational Graph Convolutional Neural Networks (RGCNs) in the task of bot detection in platform X. Our model constructs a graph that incorporates both the user relationships and their metadata. Then, DFG-NAS is adapted to automatically search for the optimal configuration of Propagation and Transformation functions in the RGCNs. Our experiments are conducted on the TwiBot-20 dataset, constructing a graph with 229,580 nodes and 227,979 edges. We study the five architectures with the highest performance during the search and achieve an accuracy of 85.7%, surpassing state-of-the-art models. Our approach not only addresses the bot detection challenge but also advocates for the broader implementation of NAS models in neural network design automation.
LGFeb 27, 2025
Recognition of Dysarthria in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis patients using HypernetworksLoukas Ilias, Dimitris Askounis
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) constitutes a progressive neurodegenerative disease with varying symptoms, including decline in speech intelligibility. Existing studies, which recognize dysarthria in ALS patients by predicting the clinical standard ALSFRS-R, rely on feature extraction strategies and the design of customized convolutional neural networks followed by dense layers. However, recent studies have shown that neural networks adopting the logic of input-conditional computations enjoy a series of benefits, including faster training, better performance, and flexibility. To resolve these issues, we present the first study incorporating hypernetworks for recognizing dysarthria. Specifically, we use audio files, convert them into log-Mel spectrogram, delta, and delta-delta, and pass the resulting image through a pretrained modified AlexNet model. Finally, we use a hypernetwork, which generates weights for a target network. Experiments are conducted on a newly collected publicly available dataset, namely VOC-ALS. Results showed that the proposed approach reaches Accuracy up to 82.66% outperforming strong baselines, including multimodal fusion methods, while findings from an ablation study demonstrated the effectiveness of the introduced methodology. Overall, our approach incorporating hypernetworks obtains valuable advantages over state-of-the-art results in terms of generalization ability, parameter efficiency, and robustness.
LGFeb 27, 2025
Mixture of Experts for Recognizing Depression from Interview and Reading TasksLoukas Ilias, Dimitris Askounis
Depression is a mental disorder and can cause a variety of symptoms, including psychological, physical, and social. Speech has been proved an objective marker for the early recognition of depression. For this reason, many studies have been developed aiming to recognize depression through speech. However, existing methods rely on the usage of only the spontaneous speech neglecting information obtained via read speech, use transcripts which are often difficult to obtain (manual) or come with high word-error rates (automatic), and do not focus on input-conditional computation methods. To resolve these limitations, this is the first study in depression recognition task obtaining representations of both spontaneous and read speech, utilizing multimodal fusion methods, and employing Mixture of Experts (MoE) models in a single deep neural network. Specifically, we use audio files corresponding to both interview and reading tasks and convert each audio file into log-Mel spectrogram, delta, and delta-delta. Next, the image representations of the two tasks pass through shared AlexNet models. The outputs of the AlexNet models are given as input to a multimodal fusion method. The resulting vector is passed through a MoE module. In this study, we employ three variants of MoE, namely sparsely-gated MoE and multilinear MoE based on factorization. Findings suggest that our proposed approach yields an Accuracy and F1-score of 87.00% and 86.66% respectively on the Androids corpus.
CLMay 30, 2023
Multitask learning for recognizing stress and depression in social mediaLoukas Ilias, Dimitris Askounis
Stress and depression are prevalent nowadays across people of all ages due to the quick paces of life. People use social media to express their feelings. Thus, social media constitute a valuable form of information for the early detection of stress and depression. Although many research works have been introduced targeting the early recognition of stress and depression, there are still limitations. There have been proposed multi-task learning settings, which use depression and emotion (or figurative language) as the primary and auxiliary tasks respectively. However, although stress is inextricably linked with depression, researchers face these two tasks as two separate tasks. To address these limitations, we present the first study, which exploits two different datasets collected under different conditions, and introduce two multitask learning frameworks, which use depression and stress as the main and auxiliary tasks respectively. Specifically, we use a depression dataset and a stressful dataset including stressful posts from ten subreddits of five domains. In terms of the first approach, each post passes through a shared BERT layer, which is updated by both tasks. Next, two separate BERT encoder layers are exploited, which are updated by each task separately. Regarding the second approach, it consists of shared and task-specific layers weighted by attention fusion networks. We conduct a series of experiments and compare our approaches with existing research initiatives, single-task learning, and transfer learning. Experiments show multiple advantages of our approaches over state-of-the-art ones.
CLMay 26, 2023
Calibration of Transformer-based Models for Identifying Stress and Depression in Social MediaLoukas Ilias, Spiros Mouzakitis, Dimitris Askounis
In today's fast-paced world, the rates of stress and depression present a surge. Social media provide assistance for the early detection of mental health conditions. Existing methods mainly introduce feature extraction approaches and train shallow machine learning classifiers. Other researches use deep neural networks or transformers. Despite the fact that transformer-based models achieve noticeable improvements, they cannot often capture rich factual knowledge. Although there have been proposed a number of studies aiming to enhance the pretrained transformer-based models with extra information or additional modalities, no prior work has exploited these modifications for detecting stress and depression through social media. In addition, although the reliability of a machine learning model's confidence in its predictions is critical for high-risk applications, there is no prior work taken into consideration the model calibration. To resolve the above issues, we present the first study in the task of depression and stress detection in social media, which injects extra linguistic information in transformer-based models, namely BERT and MentalBERT. Specifically, the proposed approach employs a Multimodal Adaptation Gate for creating the combined embeddings, which are given as input to a BERT (or MentalBERT) model. For taking into account the model calibration, we apply label smoothing. We test our proposed approaches in three publicly available datasets and demonstrate that the integration of linguistic features into transformer-based models presents a surge in the performance. Also, the usage of label smoothing contributes to both the improvement of the model's performance and the calibration of the model. We finally perform a linguistic analysis of the posts and show differences in language between stressful and non-stressful texts, as well as depressive and non-depressive posts.
CLMay 25, 2023
Context-aware attention layers coupled with optimal transport domain adaptation and multimodal fusion methods for recognizing dementia from spontaneous speechLoukas Ilias, Dimitris Askounis
Alzheimer's disease (AD) constitutes a complex neurocognitive disease and is the main cause of dementia. Although many studies have been proposed targeting at diagnosing dementia through spontaneous speech, there are still limitations. Existing state-of-the-art approaches, which propose multimodal methods, train separately language and acoustic models, employ majority-vote approaches, and concatenate the representations of the different modalities either at the input level, i.e., early fusion, or during training. Also, some of them employ self-attention layers, which calculate the dependencies between representations without considering the contextual information. In addition, no prior work has taken into consideration the model calibration. To address these limitations, we propose some new methods for detecting AD patients, which capture the intra- and cross-modal interactions. First, we convert the audio files into log-Mel spectrograms, their delta, and delta-delta and create in this way an image per audio file consisting of three channels. Next, we pass each transcript and image through BERT and DeiT models respectively. After that, context-based self-attention layers, self-attention layers with a gate model, and optimal transport domain adaptation methods are employed for capturing the intra- and inter-modal interactions. Finally, we exploit two methods for fusing the self and cross-attention features. For taking into account the model calibration, we apply label smoothing. We use both performance and calibration metrics. Experiments conducted on the ADReSS and ADReSSo Challenge datasets indicate the efficacy of our introduced approaches over existing research initiatives with our best performing model reaching Accuracy and F1-score up to 91.25% and 91.06% respectively.
CLOct 27, 2021
Detecting Dementia from Speech and Transcripts using TransformersLoukas Ilias, Dimitris Askounis, John Psarras
Alzheimer's disease (AD) constitutes a neurodegenerative disease with serious consequences to peoples' everyday lives, if it is not diagnosed early since there is no available cure. Alzheimer's is the most common cause of dementia, which constitutes a general term for loss of memory. Due to the fact that dementia affects speech, existing research initiatives focus on detecting dementia from spontaneous speech. However, little work has been done regarding the conversion of speech data to Log-Mel spectrograms and Mel-frequency cepstral coefficients (MFCCs) and the usage of pretrained models. Concurrently, little work has been done in terms of both the usage of transformer networks and the way the two modalities, i.e., speech and transcripts, are combined in a single neural network. To address these limitations, first we represent speech signal as an image and employ several pretrained models, with Vision Transformer (ViT) achieving the highest evaluation results. Secondly, we propose multimodal models. More specifically, our introduced models include Gated Multimodal Unit in order to control the influence of each modality towards the final classification and crossmodal attention so as to capture in an effective way the relationships between the two modalities. Extensive experiments conducted on the ADReSS Challenge dataset demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed models and their superiority over state-of-the-art approaches.
CLSep 14, 2021
Explainable Identification of Dementia from Transcripts using Transformer NetworksLoukas Ilias, Dimitris Askounis
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the main cause of dementia which is accompanied by loss of memory and may lead to severe consequences in peoples' everyday life if not diagnosed on time. Very few works have exploited transformer-based networks and despite the high accuracy achieved, little work has been done in terms of model interpretability. In addition, although Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE) scores are inextricably linked with the identification of dementia, research works face the task of dementia identification and the task of the prediction of MMSE scores as two separate tasks. In order to address these limitations, we employ several transformer-based models, with BERT achieving the highest accuracy accounting for 87.50%. Concurrently, we propose an interpretable method to detect AD patients based on siamese networks reaching accuracy up to 83.75%. Next, we introduce two multi-task learning models, where the main task refers to the identification of dementia (binary classification), while the auxiliary one corresponds to the identification of the severity of dementia (multiclass classification). Our model obtains accuracy equal to 86.25% on the detection of AD patients in the multi-task learning setting. Finally, we present some new methods to identify the linguistic patterns used by AD patients and non-AD ones, including text statistics, vocabulary uniqueness, word usage, correlations via a detailed linguistic analysis, and explainability techniques (LIME). Findings indicate significant differences in language between AD and non-AD patients.