This dataset contains survey responses from individuals in the tech industry about their mental health, including questions about treatment, workplace resources, and attitudes towards discussing mental health in the workplace. By analyzing this dataset, we can better understand how prevalent mental health issues are among those who work in the tech sector—and what kinds of resources they rely upon to find help—so that more can be done to create a healthier working environment for all.
The dataset tracks key measures such as age, gender, and country to determine overall prevalence, along with responses surrounding employee access to care options; whether mental health or physical illness are being taken as seriously by employers; whether or not anonymity is protected with regards to seeking help; and how coworkers may perceive those struggling with mental illness issues such as depression or anxiety. With an ever-evolving landscape due to new technology advancing faster than ever before – these statistics have never been more important for us to analyze if we hope to remain true promoters of a healthy world inside and outside our office walls.
The Chinese Psychological QA DataSet is a collection of 102,845 community Q&A pairs related to psychological topics., providing a rich source of data for research and development in psychological counseling and AI applications. Each entry includes detailed question and answer information, making it a valuable resource for understanding user queries and generating appropriate responses.
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.
This dataset contains 20,000 labelled English tweets of depressed and non-depressed users. The data is collected using the Twitter API and includes feature extraction techniques such as topic modelling and emoji sentiment analysis. It is designed for mental health classification at the tweet level.