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.
The Depression: Twitter Dataset + Feature Extraction is a valuable resource for researchers and developers working on mental health classification. It includes 20,000 labelled English tweets, collected using the Twitter API. The dataset provides feature extraction techniques such as topic modelling and emoji sentiment analysis, making it suitable for various machine learning and data analysis projects. The data is essential for understanding and predicting mental health conditions from social media content.
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.
This study surveys the attitudes and behaviors of US higher education faculty members regarding online resources, the library, and related topics. It covers a wide range of issues, including faculty dependence on electronic scholarly resources, the transition from print to electronic journals, publishing preferences, e-books, and the preservation of scholarly journals.
This repository provides code and data for automatic depression detection using a GRU/BiLSTM-based model. It includes an emotional audio-textual corpus designed to support the diagnosis of psychological distress conditions such as anxiety, depression, and post-traumatic stress disorder.