Abstract

Depression is a complex mental illness that alters a person's mental and physical condition and is thus the subject of many sciences that study anthropological phenomena, including linguistics. In our research, we investigate depression through extralinguistic and linguistic factors. We aimed to prove the hypothesis that: a) a depressed person has a special linguistic expression different from a healthy person - for example, through certain markers; b) markers of depression may vary depending on the language culture of the depressed person. We built our work on the research and theories of such scientists as O. Karpina, S. Kuranova, D. Barekat, N. Farouk, R. Goeb, D. Evans, D. Coppersmith, M. Dredze, A. Jezard, and others.

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