A DESIGN OF DIAGNOSIS SYSTEM FOR MENTAL DISORDER
Mariko Sasakura, Kenichi Iwata and Susumu Yamasaki
Department of Computer Science, Okayama University, 311, Tsushima-Naka, Kita-ku, Okayam, Japan
Keywords:
Knowledge engineering, Diagnosis.
Abstract:
We propose a web application system which helps experts to make a diagnosis of mental disorders. We
construct a knowledge base from DSM and SCID which are diagnosis manuals made by psychiatrists. We
have two stages in our diagnosis system. In the first stage, our application picks up suspicious disorders. In
the second stage, the application checks the suspicious disorders according to a flow chart generated by the
knowledge base. We discuss problems gained by our experiment of constructing the knowldge base.
1 INTRODUCTION
Diagnosis can be included an area of knowledge en-
gineering. This view is supported by the existance of
many medical expert systems (Phuong et al., 2000;
Starita et al., 1995).
In this paper, we present an experiment system to
construct a prototype system for assisting to make a
diagnosis of a mental disorders. Diagnosis of men-
tal disorders is difficult because of a lack of objective
biological markers. Therefore, to make a diagnosis,
psychiatrists are required a great deal of knowledge
of disorders and symptoms.
To assist to make an accurate diagnosis, we con-
struct a system by rearranging knowledge from DSM
(Diagnostic and Statical Manual of Mental Disor-
der) and SCID (The Structured Clinical Interview for
DSM), which are manuals to make a diagnosis of
mental disorder. DSM and SCID are a kind of knowl-
edge base constructed by experts: psychiatrists. The
original DSM or SCID are designed for checking all
disorders’ criteria. The process is time-consuming. In
order to decrease the time, our system is designed to
make a diagnosis by two stages. In the first stage, the
system lists up suspicious disorders from symptoms.
In the second stage, the system assists an expert in
making a diagnosis of the selected disorders from the
result of the first stage. In this stage, the expert checks
the criteria of suspicious disorders according to the
description of SCID, which are displayed on the com-
puter screen. To implement the system, we have to
reconstruct the knowledge of DSM for the first stage.
In Section 2, we introduce the details of DSM and
SCID. In Section 3, we describe the knowledge base
we constructed. In Section 4, we show the prototype
system we developed. In Section 5, we discuss prob-
lems we find out during our experience, and in Sec-
tion 6, we give a conclusion.
2 DIAGNOSIS MANUAL OF
MENTAL DISORDER
In this section, we mention the details of DSM (Amer-
ican Psychiatric Association, 2000) and SCID (First
et al., 2002) which are basis of our knowledge base.
2.1 DSM
Diagnosis of mental disorders has difficulties because
most of symptoms are subject of patients and not ob-
jective. Psychiatrists must give a diagnosis which dis-
order a patient has by major complaints and an obser-
vation of the patient. Therefore, the different patients
used to be given different diagnosis to the same symp-
toms.
American Psychiatric Association organizes the
relation of symptoms and the names of disorder as
a manual called “Diagnostic and Statical Manual of
Mental Disorder” (DSM). In this manual, psychia-
trists give the same disorder to the same symptoms.
The latest version of DSM is DSM-IV-TR published
in 2000.
368
Sasakura M., Iwata K. and Yamasaki S. (2009).
A DESIGN OF DIAGNOSIS SYSTEM FOR MENTAL DISORDER.
In Proceedings of the International Conference on Knowledge Engineering and Ontology Development, pages 368-371
DOI: 10.5220/0002271203680371
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