The Free Press Journal

Your Instagram photos can reveal if you are depressed

When people hit the blues, they upload images that have tint of dark colours, which can help people identity mental problems of their loved ones

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Turns out, your blue mind can taint your online photos. When you’re feeling blue, your photos turn bluer too. And more gray and dark as well, with fewer faces shown. In other words, just like people can signal their sadness by body language and behaviour, think deep sighs and slumped shoulders, depression reveals itself in social media images.

That’s the conclusion of new research showing that computers, applying machine learning, can successful­ly detect depressed people from clues in their Instagram photos. The computer’s detection rate of 70% is more reliable than the 42% success rate of general-practice doctors diagnosing depression in-person.

“This points toward a new method for early screening of depression and other emerging mental illnesses,” said coauthor Chris Danforth from the University of Vermont. “This algorithm can sometimes detect depression before a clinical diagnosis is made.”

The scientists asked volunteers, recruited from Amazon's Mechanical Turk, to share their Instagram feed as well as their mental health history. From 166 people, they collected 43,950 photos. The study was designed so that about half of the participan­ts reported having been clinically depressed in the last three years.

Then they analysed these photos, using insights from well-establishe­d psychology research, about people’s preference­s for brightness, colour, and shading. “Pixel analysis of the photos in our dataset revealed that depressed individual­s in our sample tended to post photos that were, on average, bluer, darker and grayer than those posted by healthy individual­s,” Danforth and Reese write in a blog post to accompany their new study. They also found that healthy individual chose Instagram filters, like Valencia, that gave their photos a warmer brighter tone. Among depressed people the most popular filter was Inkwell, making the photo black-and-white.

“In other words, people suffering from depression were more likely to favor a filter that literally drained all the colour out the images they wanted to share,” the scientists write. Faces in photos also turned out to provide signals about depression.

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