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Detection of acute 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) effects across protocols using automated natural language processing

Psychology

Detection of acute 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) effects across protocols using automated natural language processing

C. Agurto, G. A. Cecchi, et al.

Discover groundbreaking research conducted by Carla Agurto and colleagues, utilizing automated speech analysis to unveil objective markers of mental states influenced by MDMA and oxytocin. With impressive classification accuracies of up to 92%, this study highlights the potential of speech analysis as a tool for understanding intoxication-related mental states.... show more
Abstract
The detection of changes in mental states such as those caused by psychoactive drugs relies on clinical assessments that are inherently subjective. Automated speech analysis may represent a novel method to detect objective markers, which could help improve the characterization of these mental states. In this study, we employed computer-extracted speech features from multiple domains (acoustic, semantic, and psycholinguistic) to assess mental states after controlled administration of 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) and intranasal oxytocin. The training/validation set comprised within-participants data from 31 healthy adults who, over four sessions, were administered MDMA (0.75, 1.5 mg/kg), oxytocin (20 IU), and placebo in randomized, double-blind fashion. Participants completed two 5-min speech tasks during peak drug effects. Analyses included group-level comparisons of drug conditions and estimation of classification at the individual level within this dataset and on two independent datasets. Promising classification results were obtained to detect drug conditions, achieving cross-validated accuracies of up to 87% in training/validation and 92% in the independent datasets, suggesting that the detected patterns of speech variability are associated with drug consumption. Specifically, we found that oxytocin seems to be mostly driven by changes in emotion and prosody, which are mainly captured by acoustic features. In contrast, mental states driven by MDMA consumption appear to manifest in multiple domains of speech. Furthermore, we find that the experimental task has an effect on the speech response within these mental states, which can be attributed to presence or absence of an interaction with another individual. These results represent a proof-of-concept application of the potential of speech to provide an objective measurement of mental states elicited during intoxication.
Publisher
Neuropsychopharmacology
Published On
Jan 24, 2020
Authors
Carla Agurto, Guillermo A. Cecchi, Raquel Norel, Rachel Ostrand, Matthew Kirkpatrick, Matthew J. Baggott, Margaret C. Wardle, Harriet de Wit, Gillinder Bedi
Tags
automated speech analysis
mental states
MDMA
oxytocin
classification accuracies
emotional speech features
prosody
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