Lost without translation -- Can transformer (language models) understand mood states?
Prakrithi Shivaprakash, Diptadhi Mukherjee, Lekhansh Shukla, Animesh Mukherjee, Prabhat Chand, Pratima Murthy

TL;DR
This study evaluates the ability of transformer-based language models to recognize mood states in Indian languages, revealing significant limitations in direct native language understanding and highlighting the importance of translation for accurate mood detection.
Contribution
It demonstrates that current models struggle with native Indic language embeddings for mood detection, emphasizing the need for models trained on diverse languages for global mental health applications.
Findings
Native Indic language embeddings fail to cluster mood states effectively.
Translation significantly improves mood state recognition performance.
Human and machine translations enable better mood classification than native embeddings.
Abstract
Background: Large Language Models show promise in psychiatry but are English-centric. Their ability to understand mood states in other languages is unclear, as different languages have their own idioms of distress. Aim: To quantify the ability of language models to faithfully represent phrases (idioms of distress) of four distinct mood states (depression, euthymia, euphoric mania, dysphoric mania) expressed in Indian languages. Methods: We collected 247 unique phrases for the four mood states across 11 Indic languages. We tested seven experimental conditions, comparing k-means clustering performance on: (a) direct embeddings of native and Romanised scripts (using multilingual and Indic-specific models) and (b) embeddings of phrases translated to English and Chinese. Performance was measured using a composite score based on Adjusted Rand Index, Normalised Mutual Information, Homogeneity…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMental Health via Writing · Digital Mental Health Interventions · Mental Health Research Topics
