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Multiclassification of the symptom severity of social anxiety disorder using digital phenotypes and feature representation learning

Authors
 Hyoungshin Choi  ;  Yesol Cho  ;  Choongki Min  ;  Kyungnam Kim  ;  Eunji Kim  ;  Seungmin Lee  ;  Jae-Jin Kim 
Citation
 DIGITAL HEALTH, Vol.10 : 2.05521E+16, 2024-05 
Journal Title
 DIGITAL HEALTH 
Issue Date
2024-05
Keywords
Digital phenotype ; autoencoder ; integrated gradient ; multiclassification ; representation learning ; social anxiety disorder
Abstract
Objective Social anxiety disorder (SAD) is characterized by heightened sensitivity to social interactions or settings, which disrupts daily activities and social relationships. This study aimed to explore the feasibility of utilizing digital phenotypes for predicting the severity of these symptoms and to elucidate how the main predictive digital phenotypes differed depending on the symptom severity.Method We collected 511 behavioral and physiological data over 7 to 13 weeks from 27 SAD and 31 healthy individuals using smartphones and smartbands, from which we extracted 76 digital phenotype features. To reduce data dimensionality, we employed an autoencoder, an unsupervised machine learning model that transformed these features into low-dimensional latent representations. Symptom severity was assessed with three social anxiety-specific and nine additional psychological scales. For each symptom, we developed individual classifiers to predict the severity and applied integrated gradients to identify critical predictive features.Results Classifiers targeting social anxiety symptoms outperformed baseline accuracy, achieving mean accuracy and F1 scores of 87% (with both metrics in the range 84-90%). For secondary psychological symptoms, classifiers demonstrated mean accuracy and F1 scores of 85%. Application of integrated gradients revealed key digital phenotypes with substantial influence on the predictive models, differentiated by symptom types and levels of severity.Conclusions Leveraging digital phenotypes through feature representation learning could effectively classify symptom severities in SAD. It identifies distinct digital phenotypes associated with the cognitive, emotional, and behavioral dimensions of SAD, thereby advancing the understanding of SAD. These findings underscore the potential utility of digital phenotypes in informing clinical management.
Files in This Item:
T202404814.pdf Download
DOI
10.1177/20552076241256730
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Psychiatry (정신과학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Kim, Jae Jin(김재진) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1395-4562
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/200354
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