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Objectives: School violence risk prevention in the United States relies on manual assessments that are time-consuming and subjective. We developed a machine learning algorithm named Automated RIsk Assessment (ARIA), using natural language processing (NLP) to find linguistic patterns in standardized interview questions that can predict risk of aggression. Our goal was to evaluate the incremental change in performance with the addition of each question to simulate situations where interviews cannot be completed.
Materials And Methods: Students were interviewed with 2 14-question risk assessments, the Brief Rating of Aggression by Children and Adolescents (BRACHA) and the School Safety Scale (SSS), that encouraged open-ended answers to the interview questions. The reference standard was defined as the subject's likeliness to display aggression in the future as determined by a forensic psychiatrist. Feature sets were extracted to represent the addition of 1 question at a time in a typical interview, up to and including the 28 total main questions along with other sub-questions that arose. The ARIA NLP pipeline tokenized each feature set, then extracted n-gram features ( 5) that captured contextual and semantic information. The features were evaluated using an L2-regularized logistic regression classifier and L2-regularized support vector machine (L2-SVM) classifier.
Results: Between May 1, 2015 and February 6, 2021, 412 assessment interviews were conducted. When compared to clinical judgement, ARIA performed with an area under the Receiver Operating Characteristic curve of 0.9 after 10 BRACHA questions, suggesting that it remains powerful even with truncated interviews. The full BRACHA had similar performance to the BRACHA + SSS assessment.
Discussion And Conclusion: ARIA could use incomplete risk assessment interviews to provide modest recommendations even if interview completion is not possible. This could help to reduce the burden for the social worker or school counselor who may be using ARIA in less-than-ideal conditions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jamiaopen/ooaf084 | DOI Listing |
J Multidiscip Healthc
September 2025
School of Criminology, People's Public Security University of China, Beijing, People's Republic of China.
Background: Violence against doctors is a common worldwide problem. Such risk events, due to the further exaggeration by media reports, trigger collective anxiety among medical staff. Using structural equation modeling (SEM), this study reveals how media portrayals erode clinician trust through amplified risk perception.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPediatr Res
September 2025
Division of Violence Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, USA.
J Sch Health
September 2025
Developmental, Social, and Health Psychology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, USA.
Background: As students' use of mobile devices during school hours continues to increase, cyberbullying and online sexual harassment now occur during school hours, on school grounds via personal devices. Despite this growing reality, there is little knowledge about secondary school efforts to address it.
Methods: To understand what is needed to construct or reform policies that reflect students' online experiences, we used a mixed method approach to identify and analyze language (e.
Child Abuse Negl
September 2025
Beijing Huilongguan Hospital, Beijing, China; Peking University Huilongguan Clinical Medical School, Beijing, China; WHO Collaborating Center for Research and Training in Suicide Prevention, Beijing, China. Electronic address:
Background: Family violence-comprising both child maltreatment and interparental violence-is a pervasive global public-health concern that disproportionately affects children and adolescents. In China, current and nationally representative prevalence estimates remain scarce, impeding evidence-based prevention.
Objective: This study examines the prevalence and consequences of witnessing only, experiencing only, and concurrently witnessing and experiencing family violence among Chinese children and adolescents, with a specific focus on school bullying.
Int J Law Psychiatry
September 2025
Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Department of Medical Sciences, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden; Child Study Center, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA; Regional forensic psychiatric clinic Sala, Sala, Sweden. Electronic address:
In many countries little is known about the attitudes and ethical beliefs of practicing psychiatrists towards the use of coercive practices. This is true as regards Russia where coercion was used for political purposes during the Soviet period. However, substantial changes have occurred in the psychiatric system in recent decades with a focus on patients' rights and the idea of consent.
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