Scientists 'develop' program to identify suicidal thoughts

APD NEWS

text

Researchers have developed a computer program that can identify an individual's suicidal thoughts with over 90 percent accuracy, a just-published study has said.

The study, published Monday in the online journal Nature Human Behavior, used a machine-learning algorithm to identify two groups of people – one group consisting of 17 individuals who have suicidal tendencies and one control group consisting of 17 neurotypical individuals.

Researchers have developed a computer program they say can identify an individual's suicidal thoughts with high accuracy.

While in a brain scanner, the participants were presented with positive, negative and death-related concepts, including bliss, death, cruelty, and trouble.

Researchers said the algorithm they developed was 91 percent accurate in identifying whether a person was from the suicidal or control group, and 94 percent accurate in identifying people who had attempted suicide from individuals who only thought about it.

"People with suicidal thoughts experience different emotions when they think about some of the test concepts. For example, the concept of 'death' evoked more shame and more sadness in the group that thought about suicide," said Marcel Just, an author of the study and a psychology professor at Carnegie Mellon University's Dietrich College of Humanities and Social Sciences.

Marcel Just, an author of the study and a psychology professor at Carnegie Mellon University's Dietrich College of Humanities and Social Sciences

"This extra bit of understanding may suggest an avenue to treatment that attempts to change the emotional response to certain concepts," Just told the university in an interview.

Researchers said they hope the study can offer a new approach to assessing psychiatric disorders.

"Our latest work is unique insofar as it identifies concept alterations that are associated with suicidal ideation and behavior, using machine-learning algorithms to assess the neural representation of specific concepts related to suicide," Just said.

"This gives us a window into the brain and mind, shedding light on how suicidal individuals think about suicide and emotion related concepts."

(ASIA PACIFIC DAILY)