Psychiatry on Twitter: Content Analysis of the Use of Psychiatric Terms in French

BackgroundWith the advent of digital technology and specifically user-generated contents in social media, new ways emerged for studying possible stigma of people in relation with mental health. Several pieces of work studied the discourse conveyed about psychiatric pathologie...

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Main Authors: Sarah Delanys, Farah Benamara, Véronique Moriceau, François Olivier, Josiane Mothe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2022-02-01
Series:JMIR Formative Research
Online Access:https://formative.jmir.org/2022/2/e18539
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author Sarah Delanys
Farah Benamara
Véronique Moriceau
François Olivier
Josiane Mothe
author_facet Sarah Delanys
Farah Benamara
Véronique Moriceau
François Olivier
Josiane Mothe
author_sort Sarah Delanys
collection DOAJ
description BackgroundWith the advent of digital technology and specifically user-generated contents in social media, new ways emerged for studying possible stigma of people in relation with mental health. Several pieces of work studied the discourse conveyed about psychiatric pathologies on Twitter considering mostly tweets in English and a limited number of psychiatric disorders terms. This paper proposes the first study to analyze the use of a wide range of psychiatric terms in tweets in French. ObjectiveOur aim is to study how generic, nosographic, and therapeutic psychiatric terms are used on Twitter in French. More specifically, our study has 3 complementary goals: (1) to analyze the types of psychiatric word use (medical, misuse, or irrelevant), (2) to analyze the polarity conveyed in the tweets that use these terms (positive, negative, or neural), and (3) to compare the frequency of these terms to those observed in related work (mainly in English). MethodsOur study was conducted on a corpus of tweets in French posted from January 1, 2016, to December 31, 2018, and collected using dedicated keywords. The corpus was manually annotated by clinical psychiatrists following a multilayer annotation scheme that includes the type of word use and the opinion orientation of the tweet. A qualitative analysis was performed to measure the reliability of the produced manual annotation, and then a quantitative analysis was performed considering mainly term frequency in each layer and exploring the interactions between them. ResultsOne of the first results is a resource as an annotated dataset. The initial dataset is composed of 22,579 tweets in French containing at least one of the selected psychiatric terms. From this set, experts in psychiatry randomly annotated 3040 tweets that corresponded to the resource resulting from our work. The second result is the analysis of the annotations showing that terms are misused in 45.33% (1378/3040) of the tweets and that their associated polarity is negative in 86.21% (1188/1378) of the cases. When considering the 3 types of term use, 52.14% (1585/3040) of the tweets are associated with a negative polarity. Misused terms related to psychotic disorders (721/1300, 55.46%) were more frequent to those related to depression (15/280, 5.4%). ConclusionsSome psychiatric terms are misused in the corpora we studied, which is consistent with the results reported in related work in other languages. Thanks to the great diversity of studied terms, this work highlighted a disparity in the representations and ways of using psychiatric terms. Moreover, our study is important to help psychiatrists to be aware of the term use in new communication media such as social networks that are widely used. This study has the huge advantage to be reproducible thanks to the framework and guidelines we produced so that the study could be renewed in order to analyze the evolution of term usage. While the newly build dataset is a valuable resource for other analytical studies, it could also serve to train machine learning algorithms to automatically identify stigma in social media.
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spelling doaj.art-683cf0d49d804d37b38b4f4044dbbdb72023-08-28T20:47:20ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Formative Research2561-326X2022-02-0162e1853910.2196/18539Psychiatry on Twitter: Content Analysis of the Use of Psychiatric Terms in FrenchSarah Delanyshttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-1203-4796Farah Benamarahttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-0685-1864Véronique Moriceauhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-9641-0714François Olivierhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-2227-4067Josiane Mothehttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-9273-2193 BackgroundWith the advent of digital technology and specifically user-generated contents in social media, new ways emerged for studying possible stigma of people in relation with mental health. Several pieces of work studied the discourse conveyed about psychiatric pathologies on Twitter considering mostly tweets in English and a limited number of psychiatric disorders terms. This paper proposes the first study to analyze the use of a wide range of psychiatric terms in tweets in French. ObjectiveOur aim is to study how generic, nosographic, and therapeutic psychiatric terms are used on Twitter in French. More specifically, our study has 3 complementary goals: (1) to analyze the types of psychiatric word use (medical, misuse, or irrelevant), (2) to analyze the polarity conveyed in the tweets that use these terms (positive, negative, or neural), and (3) to compare the frequency of these terms to those observed in related work (mainly in English). MethodsOur study was conducted on a corpus of tweets in French posted from January 1, 2016, to December 31, 2018, and collected using dedicated keywords. The corpus was manually annotated by clinical psychiatrists following a multilayer annotation scheme that includes the type of word use and the opinion orientation of the tweet. A qualitative analysis was performed to measure the reliability of the produced manual annotation, and then a quantitative analysis was performed considering mainly term frequency in each layer and exploring the interactions between them. ResultsOne of the first results is a resource as an annotated dataset. The initial dataset is composed of 22,579 tweets in French containing at least one of the selected psychiatric terms. From this set, experts in psychiatry randomly annotated 3040 tweets that corresponded to the resource resulting from our work. The second result is the analysis of the annotations showing that terms are misused in 45.33% (1378/3040) of the tweets and that their associated polarity is negative in 86.21% (1188/1378) of the cases. When considering the 3 types of term use, 52.14% (1585/3040) of the tweets are associated with a negative polarity. Misused terms related to psychotic disorders (721/1300, 55.46%) were more frequent to those related to depression (15/280, 5.4%). ConclusionsSome psychiatric terms are misused in the corpora we studied, which is consistent with the results reported in related work in other languages. Thanks to the great diversity of studied terms, this work highlighted a disparity in the representations and ways of using psychiatric terms. Moreover, our study is important to help psychiatrists to be aware of the term use in new communication media such as social networks that are widely used. This study has the huge advantage to be reproducible thanks to the framework and guidelines we produced so that the study could be renewed in order to analyze the evolution of term usage. While the newly build dataset is a valuable resource for other analytical studies, it could also serve to train machine learning algorithms to automatically identify stigma in social media.https://formative.jmir.org/2022/2/e18539
spellingShingle Sarah Delanys
Farah Benamara
Véronique Moriceau
François Olivier
Josiane Mothe
Psychiatry on Twitter: Content Analysis of the Use of Psychiatric Terms in French
JMIR Formative Research
title Psychiatry on Twitter: Content Analysis of the Use of Psychiatric Terms in French
title_full Psychiatry on Twitter: Content Analysis of the Use of Psychiatric Terms in French
title_fullStr Psychiatry on Twitter: Content Analysis of the Use of Psychiatric Terms in French
title_full_unstemmed Psychiatry on Twitter: Content Analysis of the Use of Psychiatric Terms in French
title_short Psychiatry on Twitter: Content Analysis of the Use of Psychiatric Terms in French
title_sort psychiatry on twitter content analysis of the use of psychiatric terms in french
url https://formative.jmir.org/2022/2/e18539
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