npj Schizophrenia (Feb 2022)

Identifying schizophrenia stigma on Twitter: a proof of principle model using service user supervised machine learning

  • Sagar Jilka,
  • Clarissa Mary Odoi,
  • Janet van Bilsen,
  • Daniel Morris,
  • Sinan Erturk,
  • Nicholas Cummins,
  • Matteo Cella,
  • Til Wykes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41537-021-00197-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Stigma has negative effects on people with mental health problems by making them less likely to seek help. We develop a proof of principle service user supervised machine learning pipeline to identify stigmatising tweets reliably and understand the prevalence of public schizophrenia stigma on Twitter. A service user group advised on the machine learning model evaluation metric (fewest false negatives) and features for machine learning. We collected 13,313 public tweets on schizophrenia between January and May 2018. Two service user researchers manually identified stigma in 746 English tweets; 80% were used to train eight models, and 20% for testing. The two models with fewest false negatives were compared in two service user validation exercises, and the best model used to classify all extracted public English tweets. Tweets classed as stigmatising by service users were more negative in sentiment (t (744) = 12.02, p < 0.001 [95% CI: 0.196–0.273]). Our linear Support Vector Machine was the best performing model with fewest false negatives and higher service user validation. This model identified public stigma in 47% of English tweets (n5,676) which were more negative in sentiment (t (12,143) = 64.38, p < 0.001 [95% CI: 0.29–0.31]). Machine learning can identify stigmatising tweets at large scale, with service user involvement. Given the prevalence of stigma, there is an urgent need for education and online campaigns to reduce it. Machine learning can provide a real time metric on their success.