The National Study of Mental Health and Wellbeing provides key statistics on mental health issues in Australia, including the prevalence of mental disorders, consultations with health professionals, and the use of mental health-related medications. The study covers a wide range of mental health conditions and offers insights into the impact of mental health on individuals and society.
The National Study of Mental Health and Wellbeing is a comprehensive survey conducted by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) to understand the mental health status of the Australian population. Key findings include the prevalence of mental disorders, the most common types of disorders, and the use of mental health services. The study also provides data on the co-occurrence of mental and physical health conditions, consultations with health professionals, and the use of digital technologies for mental health support. This data is crucial for policymakers, researchers, and healthcare providers to develop and implement effective mental health strategies.
This project implements the conversion algorithm from the ToMi dataset to the T4D (Thinking is for Doing) dataset, as introduced in the paper https://arxiv.org/abs/2310.03051. It filters examples with Theory of Mind (ToM) questions and adapts the algorithm to account for second-order false beliefs.
Psy-Insight is a bilingual, interpretable multi-turn dataset for mental health counseling dialogues. It includes 6,208 rounds of multi-turn counseling dialogues in English and 5,776 rounds in Chinese, annotated with step-by-step reasoning labels and multi-task labels. This dataset is designed to support the application of large language models in mental health and is suitable for tasks such as emotion classification and psychological treatment interpretation.
The DAIC-WOZ dataset contains clinical interviews designed to support the diagnosis of psychological distress conditions such as anxiety, depression, and post-traumatic stress disorder. This repository provides code for extracting question-level features from the DAIC-WOZ dataset, which can be used for multimodal analysis of depression levels.