Three-dimensional facial features of suicide risk in females with depression
Jie Yang, Lingui Chen, Ling Zhang, Jing-Dong J. Han, Gang Wang

TL;DR
This study explores how 3D facial features might help identify suicide risk in women with depression, finding that a shorter philtrum is associated with higher risk.
Contribution
The study identifies sex-specific 3D facial features linked to suicide risk in depression, particularly in females.
Findings
Females with depression and suicide risk had shorter philtrum lengths.
Nose-eye distance variations were associated with suicide risk in females.
Logistic regression confirmed a significant interaction between female sex and shallow philtrum in predicting suicide risk.
Abstract
Suicide is the most severe consequence of Major Depressive Disorder (MDD). Current risk assessments rely heavily on subjective self-reports, which lack reliability. Emerging technologies, such as facial and behavioral recognition devices, are being explored to improve suicide risk evaluation. This study aimed to examine the potential of 3D facial features in identifying suicide risk and uncovering sex-specific characteristics in patients with MDD. We conducted a cross-sectional study involving 222 MDD patients. Suicide-related information was collected from caregivers, while independent raters assessed depressive symptoms and recorded sociodemographic data. Three-dimensional facial scans were acquired using the 3dMDface System, followed by preprocessing to extract key facial landmarks. Sex-stratified subgroup analyses were performed to identify suicide risk-associated facial features.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSuicide and Self-Harm Studies · Mental Health via Writing · Emotion and Mood Recognition
