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2024 journal original-research Psychol Med

Detecting suicide risk among U.S. servicemembers and veterans: a deep learning approach using social media data

Zuromski KL, Low DM, Jones NC, Kuzma R, Kessler D, Zhou L, Kastman EK, Epstein J, Madden C, Ghosh SS, Gowel D, Nock MK

Identifiers and access

DOI
10.1017/S0033291724001557
PubMed
39245902
PMC
PMC12315600
PDF
Open-access copy →
Cited by
9

Key findings

A RoBERTa deep-learning model combining post text and metadata detected suicide-related posts on a military-specific social media platform with 0.85 sensitivity and 0.96 specificity, demonstrating the feasibility of social-media-based suicide-risk screening for servicemembers and veterans.

Abstract

Source: pubmed

BACKGROUND: Military Servicemembers and Veterans are at elevated risk for suicide, but rarely self-identify to their leaders or clinicians regarding their experience of suicidal thoughts. We developed an algorithm to identify posts containing suicide-related content on a military-specific social media platform. METHODS: Publicly-shared social media posts (n = 8449) from a military-specific social media platform were reviewed and labeled by our team for the presence/absence of suicidal thoughts and behaviors and used to train several machine learning models to identify such posts. RESULTS: The best performing model was a deep learning (RoBERTa) model that incorporated post text and metadata and detected the presence of suicidal posts with relatively high sensitivity (0.85), specificity (0.96), precision (0.64), F1 score (0.73), and an area under the precision-recall curve of 0.84. Compared to non-suicidal posts, suicidal posts were more likely to contain explicit mentions of suicide, descriptions of risk factors (e.g. depression, PTSD) and help-seeking, and first-person singular pronouns. CONCLUSIONS: Our results demonstrate the feasibility and potential promise of using social media posts to identify at-risk Servicemembers and Veterans. Future work will use this approach to deliver targeted interventions to social media users at risk for suicide.

Topics

  • mental-health-psychiatry
  • ml-nlp-knowledge

Associated projects

Lab authors

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