Toward Linguistic Recognition of Generalized Anxiety Disorder

BackgroundGeneralized anxiety disorder (GAD) refers to extreme, uncontrollable, and persistent worry and anxiety. The disorder is known to affect the social functioning and well-being of millions of people, but despite its prevalence and burden to society, it has proven difficult to identify unique...

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Main Authors: Laurens Rook, Maria Chiara Mazza, Iulia Lefter, Frances Brazier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-04-01
Series:Frontiers in Digital Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fdgth.2022.779039/full
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author Laurens Rook
Maria Chiara Mazza
Iulia Lefter
Frances Brazier
author_facet Laurens Rook
Maria Chiara Mazza
Iulia Lefter
Frances Brazier
author_sort Laurens Rook
collection DOAJ
description BackgroundGeneralized anxiety disorder (GAD) refers to extreme, uncontrollable, and persistent worry and anxiety. The disorder is known to affect the social functioning and well-being of millions of people, but despite its prevalence and burden to society, it has proven difficult to identify unique behavioral markers. Interestingly, the worrying behavior observed in GAD is argued to stem from a verbal linguistic process. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to investigate if GAD can be predicted from the language people use to put their anxious worries into words. Given the importance of avoidance sensitivity (a higher likelihood to respond anxiously to novel or unexpected triggers) in GAD, this study also explored if prediction accuracy increases when individual differences in behavioral avoidance and approach sensitivity are taken into account.MethodAn expressive writing exercise was used to explore whether GAD can be predicted from linguistic characteristics of written narratives. Specifically, 144 undergraduate student participants were asked to recall an anxious experience during their university life, and describe this experience in written form. Clinically validated behavioral measures for GAD and self-reported sensitivity in behavioral avoidance/inhibition (BIS) and behavioral approach (BAS), were collected. A set of classification experiments was performed to evaluate GAD predictability based on linguistic features, BIS/BAS scores, and a concatenation of the two.ResultsThe classification results show that GAD can, indeed, be successfully predicted from anxiety-focused written narratives. Prediction accuracy increased when differences in BIS and BAS were included, which suggests that, under those conditions, negatively valenced emotion words and words relating to social processes could be sufficient for recognition of GAD.ConclusionsUndergraduate students with a high GAD score can be identified based on their written recollection of an anxious experience during university life. This insight is an important first step toward development of text-based digital health applications and technologies aimed at remote screening for GAD. Future work should investigate the extent to which these results uniquely apply to university campus populations or generalize to other demographics.
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spelling doaj.art-51444090c5844d269571831716752c542022-12-22T00:14:10ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Digital Health2673-253X2022-04-01410.3389/fdgth.2022.779039779039Toward Linguistic Recognition of Generalized Anxiety DisorderLaurens RookMaria Chiara MazzaIulia LefterFrances BrazierBackgroundGeneralized anxiety disorder (GAD) refers to extreme, uncontrollable, and persistent worry and anxiety. The disorder is known to affect the social functioning and well-being of millions of people, but despite its prevalence and burden to society, it has proven difficult to identify unique behavioral markers. Interestingly, the worrying behavior observed in GAD is argued to stem from a verbal linguistic process. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to investigate if GAD can be predicted from the language people use to put their anxious worries into words. Given the importance of avoidance sensitivity (a higher likelihood to respond anxiously to novel or unexpected triggers) in GAD, this study also explored if prediction accuracy increases when individual differences in behavioral avoidance and approach sensitivity are taken into account.MethodAn expressive writing exercise was used to explore whether GAD can be predicted from linguistic characteristics of written narratives. Specifically, 144 undergraduate student participants were asked to recall an anxious experience during their university life, and describe this experience in written form. Clinically validated behavioral measures for GAD and self-reported sensitivity in behavioral avoidance/inhibition (BIS) and behavioral approach (BAS), were collected. A set of classification experiments was performed to evaluate GAD predictability based on linguistic features, BIS/BAS scores, and a concatenation of the two.ResultsThe classification results show that GAD can, indeed, be successfully predicted from anxiety-focused written narratives. Prediction accuracy increased when differences in BIS and BAS were included, which suggests that, under those conditions, negatively valenced emotion words and words relating to social processes could be sufficient for recognition of GAD.ConclusionsUndergraduate students with a high GAD score can be identified based on their written recollection of an anxious experience during university life. This insight is an important first step toward development of text-based digital health applications and technologies aimed at remote screening for GAD. Future work should investigate the extent to which these results uniquely apply to university campus populations or generalize to other demographics.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fdgth.2022.779039/fullgeneralized anxiety disordermental distressemotion regulationnatural language processingBIS/BAS
spellingShingle Laurens Rook
Maria Chiara Mazza
Iulia Lefter
Frances Brazier
Toward Linguistic Recognition of Generalized Anxiety Disorder
Frontiers in Digital Health
generalized anxiety disorder
mental distress
emotion regulation
natural language processing
BIS/BAS
title Toward Linguistic Recognition of Generalized Anxiety Disorder
title_full Toward Linguistic Recognition of Generalized Anxiety Disorder
title_fullStr Toward Linguistic Recognition of Generalized Anxiety Disorder
title_full_unstemmed Toward Linguistic Recognition of Generalized Anxiety Disorder
title_short Toward Linguistic Recognition of Generalized Anxiety Disorder
title_sort toward linguistic recognition of generalized anxiety disorder
topic generalized anxiety disorder
mental distress
emotion regulation
natural language processing
BIS/BAS
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fdgth.2022.779039/full
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