Abstract

In the Artificial Intelligence of Medical Things (AIoMT), Internet-Delivered Psychological Treatment (IDPT) effectively improves the quality of mental health treatments. With the advent of COVID-19, psychological tasks have become overloaded and complicated for medical professionals due to the overlap of sentimental values. The development of an AIoMT tool requires labeling of data to achieve clinical-level performance. Text data requires an appropriate set of linguistic features for vector latent representation and segmentation. Emotional biases could lead to incorrect segmentation of patient-authorized texts, and labeling emotional data is time-consuming. In this article, we propose an assistant tool for psychologists to assist them in mental health treatment and note-taking. We first extend the word and emotion lexicon and then apply a hierarchical attention method to support data labeling. The learned latent representation uses word position prediction and sentence-level attention to create a semantic framework. The augmented vector representation helps in highlighting words and classifying nine different symptoms from the text written by the patient. Our experimental results show that the emotion lexicon helps to increase the accuracy by 5% without affecting the overall results, and that the hierarchical attention method achieves an F1 score of 0.89.

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