Published on in Vol 5, No 2 (2022): Apr-Jun

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/32603, first published .
Emotional Word Use in Informal Carers of People Living With Dementia: Linguistic Analysis of Online Discussion Forums

Emotional Word Use in Informal Carers of People Living With Dementia: Linguistic Analysis of Online Discussion Forums

Emotional Word Use in Informal Carers of People Living With Dementia: Linguistic Analysis of Online Discussion Forums

Journals

  1. You S. The experience of transition among family caregivers of persons with dementia at the time of nursing home admission. NPG Neurologie - Psychiatrie - Gériatrie 2023;23(134):115 View
  2. Engineer M, Kot S, Dixon E. Investigating the Readability and Linguistic, Psychological, and Emotional Characteristics of Digital Dementia Information Written in the English Language: Multitrait-Multimethod Text Analysis. JMIR Formative Research 2023;7:e48143 View
  3. Geng S, He Y, Duan L, Yang C, Wu X, Liang G, Niu B. The Association Between Linguistic Characteristics of Physicians’ Communication and Their Economic Returns: Mixed Method Study. Journal of Medical Internet Research 2024;26:e42850 View
  4. Foster M, Egwuonwu C, Vernon E, Alarifi M, Hughes M. Informal Caregivers Connecting on the Web: Content Analysis of Posts on Discussion Forums. JMIR Formative Research 2025;9:e64757 View
  5. Munin S, Ong D, Okland S, Freedman G, Beer J. Language measures correlate with other measures used to study emotion. Communications Psychology 2025;3(1) View
  6. Magrizos S. The dark side of companies’ digital transformation: the carbon footprint of online activities. International Marketing Review 2025;42(6):1360 View
  7. Zhang S, Zhang L, Weng J, Gasevic D, Wei Y, Chen Z, Zhang J, Liu L, Jian W. Evaluating community resilience through social media during China’s first post-COVID-19 reopening: insights from machine learning. Journal of Global Health 2025;15 View