JMIR Mental Health (Oct 2024)

Empowering Mental Health Monitoring Using a Macro-Micro Personalization Framework for Multimodal-Multitask Learning: Descriptive Study

  • Meishu Song,
  • Zijiang Yang,
  • Andreas Triantafyllopoulos,
  • Zixing Zhang,
  • Zhe Nan,
  • Muxuan Tang,
  • Hiroki Takeuchi,
  • Toru Nakamura,
  • Akifumi Kishi,
  • Tetsuro Ishizawa,
  • Kazuhiro Yoshiuchi,
  • Björn Schuller,
  • Yoshiharu Yamamoto

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/59512
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11
p. e59512

Abstract

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BackgroundThe field of mental health technology presently has significant gaps that need addressing, particularly in the domain of daily monitoring and personalized assessments. Current noninvasive devices such as wristbands and smartphones are capable of collecting a wide range of data, which has not yet been fully used for mental health monitoring. ObjectiveThis study aims to introduce a novel dataset for personalized daily mental health monitoring and a new macro-micro framework. This framework is designed to use multimodal and multitask learning strategies for improved personalization and prediction of emotional states in individuals. MethodsData were collected from 298 individuals using wristbands and smartphones, capturing physiological signals, speech data, and self-annotated emotional states. The proposed framework combines macro-level emotion transformer embeddings with micro-level personalization layers specific to each user. It also introduces a Dynamic Restrained Uncertainty Weighting method to effectively integrate various data types for a balanced representation of emotional states. Several fusion techniques, personalization strategies, and multitask learning approaches were explored. ResultsThe proposed framework was evaluated using the concordance correlation coefficient, resulting in a score of 0.503. This result demonstrates the framework’s efficacy in predicting emotional states. ConclusionsThe study concludes that the proposed multimodal and multitask learning framework, which leverages transformer-based techniques and dynamic task weighting strategies, is superior for the personalized monitoring of mental health. The study indicates the potential of transforming daily mental health monitoring into a more personalized app, opening up new avenues for technology-based mental health interventions.