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Speech Graphs Provide a Quantitative Measure of Thought Disorder in Psychosis

BACKGROUND: Psychosis has various causes, including mania and schizophrenia. Since the differential diagnosis of psychosis is exclusively based on subjective assessments of oral interviews with patients, an objective quantification of the speech disturbances that characterize mania and schizophrenia...

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Autores principales: Mota, Natalia B., Vasconcelos, Nivaldo A. P., Lemos, Nathalia, Pieretti, Ana C., Kinouchi, Osame, Cecchi, Guillermo A., Copelli, Mauro, Ribeiro, Sidarta
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3322168/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22506057
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0034928
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author Mota, Natalia B.
Vasconcelos, Nivaldo A. P.
Lemos, Nathalia
Pieretti, Ana C.
Kinouchi, Osame
Cecchi, Guillermo A.
Copelli, Mauro
Ribeiro, Sidarta
author_facet Mota, Natalia B.
Vasconcelos, Nivaldo A. P.
Lemos, Nathalia
Pieretti, Ana C.
Kinouchi, Osame
Cecchi, Guillermo A.
Copelli, Mauro
Ribeiro, Sidarta
author_sort Mota, Natalia B.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Psychosis has various causes, including mania and schizophrenia. Since the differential diagnosis of psychosis is exclusively based on subjective assessments of oral interviews with patients, an objective quantification of the speech disturbances that characterize mania and schizophrenia is in order. In principle, such quantification could be achieved by the analysis of speech graphs. A graph represents a network with nodes connected by edges; in speech graphs, nodes correspond to words and edges correspond to semantic and grammatical relationships. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: To quantify speech differences related to psychosis, interviews with schizophrenics, manics and normal subjects were recorded and represented as graphs. Manics scored significantly higher than schizophrenics in ten graph measures. Psychopathological symptoms such as logorrhea, poor speech, and flight of thoughts were grasped by the analysis even when verbosity differences were discounted. Binary classifiers based on speech graph measures sorted schizophrenics from manics with up to 93.8% of sensitivity and 93.7% of specificity. In contrast, sorting based on the scores of two standard psychiatric scales (BPRS and PANSS) reached only 62.5% of sensitivity and specificity. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The results demonstrate that alterations of the thought process manifested in the speech of psychotic patients can be objectively measured using graph-theoretical tools, developed to capture specific features of the normal and dysfunctional flow of thought, such as divergence and recurrence. The quantitative analysis of speech graphs is not redundant with standard psychometric scales but rather complementary, as it yields a very accurate sorting of schizophrenics and manics. Overall, the results point to automated psychiatric diagnosis based not on what is said, but on how it is said.
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spelling pubmed-33221682012-04-13 Speech Graphs Provide a Quantitative Measure of Thought Disorder in Psychosis Mota, Natalia B. Vasconcelos, Nivaldo A. P. Lemos, Nathalia Pieretti, Ana C. Kinouchi, Osame Cecchi, Guillermo A. Copelli, Mauro Ribeiro, Sidarta PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Psychosis has various causes, including mania and schizophrenia. Since the differential diagnosis of psychosis is exclusively based on subjective assessments of oral interviews with patients, an objective quantification of the speech disturbances that characterize mania and schizophrenia is in order. In principle, such quantification could be achieved by the analysis of speech graphs. A graph represents a network with nodes connected by edges; in speech graphs, nodes correspond to words and edges correspond to semantic and grammatical relationships. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: To quantify speech differences related to psychosis, interviews with schizophrenics, manics and normal subjects were recorded and represented as graphs. Manics scored significantly higher than schizophrenics in ten graph measures. Psychopathological symptoms such as logorrhea, poor speech, and flight of thoughts were grasped by the analysis even when verbosity differences were discounted. Binary classifiers based on speech graph measures sorted schizophrenics from manics with up to 93.8% of sensitivity and 93.7% of specificity. In contrast, sorting based on the scores of two standard psychiatric scales (BPRS and PANSS) reached only 62.5% of sensitivity and specificity. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The results demonstrate that alterations of the thought process manifested in the speech of psychotic patients can be objectively measured using graph-theoretical tools, developed to capture specific features of the normal and dysfunctional flow of thought, such as divergence and recurrence. The quantitative analysis of speech graphs is not redundant with standard psychometric scales but rather complementary, as it yields a very accurate sorting of schizophrenics and manics. Overall, the results point to automated psychiatric diagnosis based not on what is said, but on how it is said. Public Library of Science 2012-04-09 /pmc/articles/PMC3322168/ /pubmed/22506057 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0034928 Text en Mota et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mota, Natalia B.
Vasconcelos, Nivaldo A. P.
Lemos, Nathalia
Pieretti, Ana C.
Kinouchi, Osame
Cecchi, Guillermo A.
Copelli, Mauro
Ribeiro, Sidarta
Speech Graphs Provide a Quantitative Measure of Thought Disorder in Psychosis
title Speech Graphs Provide a Quantitative Measure of Thought Disorder in Psychosis
title_full Speech Graphs Provide a Quantitative Measure of Thought Disorder in Psychosis
title_fullStr Speech Graphs Provide a Quantitative Measure of Thought Disorder in Psychosis
title_full_unstemmed Speech Graphs Provide a Quantitative Measure of Thought Disorder in Psychosis
title_short Speech Graphs Provide a Quantitative Measure of Thought Disorder in Psychosis
title_sort speech graphs provide a quantitative measure of thought disorder in psychosis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3322168/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22506057
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0034928
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