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Journal Article

Citation

Morese R, Gruebner O, Sykora M, Elayan S, Fadda M, Albanese E. Front. Psychiatry 2022; 13: e652167.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, Frontiers Media)

DOI

10.3389/fpsyt.2022.652167

PMID

35492693

PMCID

PMC9046648

Abstract

Social media platforms are increasingly used across many population groups not only to communicate and consume information, but also to express symptoms of psychological distress and suicidal thoughts. The detection of suicidal ideation (SI) can contribute to suicide prevention. Twitter data suggesting SI have been associated with negative emotions (e.g., shame, sadness) and a number of geographical and ecological variables (e.g., geographic location, environmental stress). Other important research contributions on SI come from studies in neuroscience. To date, very few research studies have been conducted that combine different disciplines (epidemiology, health geography, neurosciences, psychology, and social media big data science), to build innovative research directions on this topic. This article aims to offer a new interdisciplinary perspective, that is, a Population Neuroscience perspective on SI in order to highlight new ways in which multiple scientific fields interact to successfully investigate emotions and stress in social media to detect SI in the population. We argue that a Population Neuroscience perspective may help to better understand the mechanisms underpinning SI and to promote more effective strategies to prevent suicide timely and at scale.


Language: en

Keywords

epidemiology; mental health; social media; geography; neuroscience; Population Neuroscience; suicide ideation

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