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Big Data Analytics and AI in Mental Healthcare

2019-03-12
Ariel Rosenfeld, David Benrimoh, Caitrin Armstrong, Nykan Mirchi, Timothe Langlois-Therrien, Colleen Rollins, Myriam Tanguay-Sela, Joseph Mehltretter, Robert Fratila, Sonia Israel, Emily Snook, Kelly Perlman, Akiva Kleinerman, Bechara Saab, Mark Thoburn, Cheryl Gabbay, Amit Yaniv-Rosenfeld

Abstract

Mental health conditions cause a great deal of distress or impairment; depression alone will affect 11% of the world’s population. The application of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and big-data technologies to mental health has great potential for personalizing treatment selection, prognosticating, monitoring for relapse, detecting and helping to prevent mental health conditions before they reach clinical-level symptomatology, and even delivering some treatments. However, unlike similar applications in other fields of medicine, there are several unique challenges in mental health applications which currently pose barriers towards the implementation of these technologies. Specifically, there are very few widely used or validated biomarkers in mental health, leading to a heavy reliance on patient and clinician derived questionnaire data as well as interpretation of new signals such as digital phenotyping. In addition, diagnosis also lacks the same objective ‘gold standard’ as in other conditions such as oncology, where clinicians and researchers can often rely on pathological analysis for confirmation of diagnosis. In this chapter we discuss the major opportunities, limitations and techniques used for improving mental healthcare through AI and big-data. We explore both the computational, clinical and ethical considerations and best practices as well as lay out the major researcher directions for the near future.

Abstract (translated by Google)
URL

http://arxiv.org/abs/1903.12071

PDF

http://arxiv.org/pdf/1903.12071


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