She is not a psychologist now according to her page. And how do you know she was successful? I skimmed a few articles about her and saw no attempts to verify her claims. She offered no evidence when asked why people should believe her.
I'm not even sure what to say. It's self-evidently a terrible idea, but we all just seem to be charging full-steam ahead like so many awful ideas in the past couple of decades.
I haven't been so unlucky myself, but I know many who've had terrible first experiences with therapists and psychologists, where I'm wondering why those people even are in the job they are, but some of them got so turned off they stopped trying to find anyone else to help them, because they think most mental health professionals would be the same as the first person they sought help from.
It's also less pressure, a more comfortable environment (home vs. stranger's office), no commitments to a next session, and less embarrassing (sharing your personal issues to a computer via text is less anxiety-inducing than saying them to a person's face).
With that all said, I'm strongly opposed to people using LLMs as therapists.
In their mind, most of the times, if there is no one standing behind them when they chat with a LLM, then the conversation for most intents and purposes is private.
Obviously, us who are born with a keyboard in front of our hands, know this to not be true, and know we're being tracked constantly with our data being sold to the highest bidder. But the typical person have more or less zero concerns about this, which is why it's not a priority issue to be solved.
Should be banned. Average people have no basis to know whether drug X is appropriate for them. If your doctor thinks you need it, he'll tell you. These ads also perpetuate the harmful idea that there's a pill for everything.
So it’s sensible that someone out there is evaluating its competence and thinking about a better alternative for these folks than yoloing their worst thoughts into chatgpt.com’s default LLM.
Everyone's hand is being forced by the major AI providers existing.
Even if you were a perfect altruist with a crusade against the idea of people using LLMs for mental health, you could still be forced to dash towards figuring out how to build LLM tools for mental health in your consideration for others.
The age-old problem is how to prevent that disaster and save those lives. That's not trivial. Creating an Oncological Rhubarb Authority could easily make the problem much worse, not better.
If you try to merely stop people from using LLMs as therapists (could you elaborate on what that looks like?) and call it a day, your consideration isn't extending to all the people who will do it anyways.
That's what I mean by forcing your hand into doing the work of figuring out how to make LLM therapists work even if you were vehemently against the idea.
I think you're assuming my proposed solution is to take rhubarb away from people? It's not.
Maybe you want to found the "Oncological Rhubarb Validation Association" or something. If so, that has nothing to do with me? That's just snake oil marketing. Not my field.
My other stance, which I suspect is probably more controversial, is that I'm not convinced that mental health care is nearly as effective as people think. In general, mental health outcomes for teens are getting markedly worse, and it's not for lack of access. We have more mental health access than we've had previously -- it just doesn't feel like it because the demand has risen even more sharply.
On a personal level, I've been quite depressed lately, and also feeling quite isolated. As part of an attempt to get out of my own shell I mentioned this to a friend. Now, my friend is totally well-intended, and I don't begrudge him whatsoever. But, the first response out of his mouth was whether I'd sought professional mental health care. His response really hurt. I need meaningful social connection. I don't need a licensed professional to charge me money to talk about my childhood. I think a lot of people are lost and lonely, and for many people mental health care is a band-aid over a real crisis of isolation and despair.
I'm not recommending against people seeking mental health care, of course. And, despite my claims there are many people who truly need it, and truly benefit from it. But I don't think it's the unalloyed good that many people seem to believe it to be.
Which is to say, your stance might not be as controversial as you think, since it was the adult take in a children's cartoon almost 60 years ago.
Peanuts is funny, but it may not be the source of wisdom you think it is.
Lucy isn't actually a psychologist which is part of the reason the "gag" is funny.
We can see an LLM as someone that talks with more people, for more time, than anyone on earth talks in their lifetime. So they are due to be in constant contact with people in mental distress. At that point, you might as well consider the importance of giving them the skills of a mental health professonal, because they are going to be facing more of this than a priest in a confessional. And this is true whether someone says "Gemini, pretend that you are a psychologist" or not. You or I don't need a prompt to know we need to notice when someone is in a severe psychotic episode: Some level of mental health awareness is built in, if just to protect ourselves. So an LLM needs quite a bit of this by default to avoid being really harmful. And once you give it that, you might as well evaluate it against professionals: Not because it must be as good, but because it'd be really nice if it was, even when it's not trying to act as one.
I heard someone say that LLMs don't need to be as good as an expert to be useful, they just need to be better than your best available expert. A lot of people don't have access to mental health care, and will ask their chatbot to ask like a psychologist.
This mostly makes sense.
The problem is that people will take what you've said to mean "If I have no access to a therapist, at least I can access an LLM", with a default assumption that something is better than nothing. But this quickly breaks down when the sycophantic LLM encourages you to commit suicide, or reinforces your emerging psychosis, etc. Speaking to nobody is better than speaking to something that is actively harmful.
I've heard people say the same thing ("LLMs don't need to be as good as an expert to be useful, they just need to be better than your best available expert"), and I also know that some people assume that LLMs are, by default, better than nothing. Hence my comment.
We really need to get the psychology right with LLMs.
(1) The demand for mental health services is an order of magnitude vs the supply, but the demand we see is a fraction of the demand that exists because a lot of people, especially men, aren't believers in the "therapeutic culture"
In the days of Freud you could get a few hours of intensive therapy a week but today you're lucky to get an hour a week. An AI therapist can be with you constantly.
(2) I believe psychodiagnosis based on text analysis could greatly outperform mainstream methods. Give an AI someone's social media feed and I think depression, mania, schizo-* spectrum, disordered narcissism and many other states and traits will be immediately visible.
(3) Despite the CBT revolution and various attempts to intensify CBT, a large part of the effectiveness of therapy comes from the patient feeling mirrored by the therapist [1] and the LLM can accomplish this, in fact, this could be accomplished by the old ELIZA program.
(4) The self of the therapist can be both an obstacle and an instrument to progress. See [2] On one level the reactions that a therapist feels are useful, but they also get in the way of the therapist providing perfect mirroring [3] and letting optimal frustration unfold in the patient instead of providing "corrective emoptional experiences." I'm going to argue that the AI therapist can be trained to "perceive" the things a human therapist perceives but that it does not have its own reactions that will make the patient feel judged and get in the way of that unfolding.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Rogers
[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Countertransference
[3] why settle for less?
[4] https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0010440X6...
Maybe you’re comparing it to some idealized view of what human therapy is like? There’s no benchmark for it, but humans struggle in real mental health care. They make terrible mistakes all the time. And human therapy doesn’t scale to the level needed. Millions of people simply go without help. And therapy is generally one hour a week. You’re supposed to sort out your entire life in that window? Impossible. It sets people up for failure.
So, if we had some perfect system for getting every person that needs help the exact therapist they need, meeting as often as they need, then maybe AI therapy would be a bad idea, but that’s not what we have, and we never will.
Personally, I think the best way to scale mental healthcare is through group therapy and communities. Having a community of people all coming together over common issues has always been far more helpful than one on one therapy for me. But getting some assistance from an AI therapist on off hours can also be useful.
Terrible idea or not, it's probably helpful to think of LLMs not as "AI mental healthcare" but rather as another form of potentially bad advice. From a therapeutic perspective, Claude is not all that different from the patient having a friend who is sometimes counterproductive. Or the patient reading a self-help book that doesn't align with your therapeutic perspective.
(And I'm not being theoretical here, I have quite a bit of experience getting incredibly inadequate mental health care.)
"Good" is too broad and subjective to be a useful metric.
Here's a 2.5 hour session (split into several videos) with a doctor who has a bad relationship with his son and felt like a failure for it:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=42JDnrD106w
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S5H2YGljhqQ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bZ9_0j_fmeg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eiCrdGVa8Q0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cARvhlTckaM
Here's a couple of hour session with Marilyn who was diagnosed with lung cancer and spiraling with depression, anxiety, shame, loneliness, hopelessness, demoralization, and anger, despite her successful career:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S7sQ_zDGsY8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tyuFN4mbGZQ (there's probably more parts to find through YouTube somehow)
And a session with Lee with loneliness and marriage relationship problems:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=imEMM3r6XL8 (probably more parts as well)
It's like saying "it is still debated if debugging even works" as if all languages, all debuggers, all programmers, all systems, are the same and if you can find lots of people who can't debug then "debugging doesn't work". But no, you only need a few examples of "therapy working" to believe that it works, and see the whole session to see that it isn't just luck or just the relief of talking, but is a skill and a technique and a debugging of the mind.
And say what you will about this, a paid professional is, at the very least, unlikely to let you wind yourself up or go down weird rabbit holes... something that LLMs seem to excel at.
It's better not to degrade the close friend, and "life coach focused on healthy self awareness" is probably indistinguishable from most good therapy.
Reasoning that if he's not good it would show up in patients thinking he's bad, and not feeling any better. And then he could tune his therapy approaches towards the ones which make people feel better and rate him as more understanding and listening and caring. And he criticises therapists who won't do that, therapists who say patients have been seeing them for years with only incremental improvements or no improvements.
Yes there's no objective way to measure how angry or suicidal or anxious someone is and compare two people, but if someone is subjectively reporting 5/5 sadness about X at the start of a session and wants help with X, then at some point in the future they should be reporting that number going down or they aren't being helped. And more effective help could mean that it goes down to 1/5 in three sessions instead of down to 4/5 in three years, and that's a feedback loop which (he says) has got him to be able to help people in a single two-hour therapy session, where most therapists and insurance companies will only do a too-short session with no feedback loop.
This is like a questionnaire on how much stronger you feel after working out at a gym: you often don't, you feel tired.
Both gym and talking therapy (when done correctly) will push you slightly out of your comfort zone, and aim to let you safely deal with moderate amounts of something that you find really hard. So as to expand your capabilities.
"I feel good" immediately after is utterly the wrong metric.
Being more capable / feeling better some time later is the more reliable indicator, like progress at a gym.
And also this is why an agreeable statistical word generator LLM is not the correct tool for the job.
You trust humans to do it. Trust has little to do with what actually happens.
Not everywhere in the world do companies count as people, yet they can still be sued.
I'd wager the companies lobbied for this to gain extra rights.
Actually yes, everywhere in the world. That has a functioning legal system, at least.
If companies weren't treated as legal persons, they wouldn't be able to enter into contracts.
But also, just to be clear, a legal person, like a corporation, is not a natural person. Unlike a natural person, they can't vote. There isn't anywhere in the world that considers corporations to be natural persons.
EDIT: Note that ianal, nor a historian. The specifics of how this came about are best learned from a more authoritative source.
Edit: Thank you!
https://www.forbes.com/sites/johnkoetsier/2025/11/10/grok-le...
Grok 3 and 4 scored at the bottom, only above gpt-4o, which I find interesting, because there was such big pushback on reddit when they got rid of 4o due to people having emotional attachments to the model. Interestingly the newest models (like gemini 2.5 and gpt 5 did the best.
This will become more and more of an issue as people look for a quick fix for their life problems, but I don't think AI/ML is ever going to be an effective mechanism for life improvement on the mental health issue.
It'll instead be used as a tool of oppression like in THX1138, where the apparency of assistance is going to be provided in lieu of actual assistance.
Whether we like it or not, humans are a hive species. We need each other to improve our lives as individuals. Nobody ever climbed the mountain to live alone who didn't come back down, realizing how much the rest of humanity is actually essential to human life.
This'll be received as an unpopular opinion, but I remain suspicious of any and all attempts to replace modern health practitioners with machines. This will be subverted and usurped for nefarious purposes, mark my words.
First, I just don’t see a world where therapy can be replaced by LLMs, at least in the realistic future. I think humans have been social creatures since the dawn of our species and in these most intimate conversations are going to want to be having them with an actual human. One of my mentors has talked about how after years of virtual sessions dominating, the demand for in-person sessions is spiking back up. The power of being in the same physical room with someone who is offering a nonjudgmental space to exist isn’t going to be replaced.
That being said, given the shortage of licensed mental health counselors, and the prohibitive cost especially for many who need a therapist most, I truly hope LLMs develop to offer an accessible and cheap alternative that can at least offer some relief. It does have the potential to save lives and I fully support ethically-focused progress toward developing that sort of option.
Same thing for the patient LLM. We can probably fine-tune an LLM to do a better job at simulating patients.
Those two components of our framework have space for improvement
The grounding this had was that texts produced by role-playing humans (not even actual patients) were closer to texts produced by the patient simulations prompt they decided to end up with than others they tried.
That said, the idea that a pattern recognition and generation tool can be used for helping people with emotional problems is deeply unsettling and dangerous. This technology needs to be strictly regulated yesterday.
Seems to me that benchmarking a thing has an interesting relationship with acceptance of the thing.
I'm interested to see human thoughts on either of these.
The architecture and evaluation approach seem broadly similar.
RicardoRei•4h ago
We built MindEval because existing benchmarks don’t capture real therapy dynamics or common clinical failure modes. The framework simulates multi-turn patient–clinician interactions and scores the full conversation using evaluation criteria designed with licensed clinical psychologists.
We validated both patient realism and the automated judge against human clinicians, then benchmarked 12 frontier models (including GPT-5, Claude 4.5, and Gemini 2.5). Across all models, average clinical performance stayed below 4 on a 1–6 scale. Performance degraded further in severe symptom scenarios and in longer conversations (40 turns vs 20). We also found that larger or reasoning-heavy models did not reliably outperform smaller ones in therapeutic quality.
We open-sourced all prompts, code, scoring logic, and human validation data because we believe clinical AI evaluation shouldn’t be proprietary.
Happy to answer technical questions on methodology, validation, known limitations, or the failure modes we observed.
embedding-shape•2h ago
I'm sure it's somewhere in the details somewhere, but after a quick skim I didn't find anything outlined about how you managed and used the prompts, and if it was per model or not.
Thanks a bunch for being open to answering questions here, and thanks for trying to attack this particular problem with scientific rigor, even if it's really difficult to do so.
RicardoRei•2h ago
embedding-shape•2h ago
Wouldn't that be easy to make fair by making sure all models tried it with the same prompts? So you have model X and Y, and prompts A and B, and X runs once with A, once with B, and same for Y.
Reason I ask, is because in my own local benchmarks I do for each model release with my own tasks, I've noticed a huge variance in quality of responses based on the prompts themselves. Slight variation of wording seems to have a big effect on the final responses, and those variations seems to again have a big variance of effect depending on the model.
Sometimes a huge system prompt makes a model return much higher quality responses while another model gives much higher quality responses when the system prompt is as small as it possible can. At least this is what I'm seeing with the local models I'm putting under test with my private benchmarks.
irthomasthomas•14m ago
megaman821•2h ago
crazygringo•2h ago
I'd very much like to see clinicians randomly selected from BetterHelp and paid to interact the same way with the LLM patient and judged by the LLM, as the current methodology uses. And see what score they get.
Ideally this should be done blind, I don't know if BetterHelp allows for therapy through a text chat interface? Where the therapist has no idea it's for a study and so isn't trying to "do better" then they would for any average client.
Because while I know a lot of people for whom therapy has been life-changing, I also know of a lot of terrible and even unprofessional therapy experiences.
RicardoRei•2h ago
The main points of our methodology are: 1) prove that is possible to simulate patients with an LLM. Which we did. 2) prove that an LLM as a Judge can effectively score conversations according to several dimensions that are similar to how clinicians are also evaluated. Which we also did and we show that the average correlation with human evaluators is medium-high.
Given 1) and 2) we can then benchmark LLMs and as you see, there is plenty of room for improvement. We did not claim anything regarding human performance... its likely that human performance also needs to improve :) thats another study
crazygringo•2h ago
So the results are meaningful in terms of establishing that LLM therapeutic performance can be evaluated.
But not meaningful in terms of comparing LLMs with human clinicians.
So in that case, how can you justify the title you used for submission, "New benchmark shows top LLMs struggle in real mental health care"?
How are they struggling? Struggling relative to what? For all your work shows, couldn't they be outperforming the average human? Or even if they're below that, couldn't they still have a large net positive effect with few negative outcomes?
I don't understand where the negative framing of your title is coming from.
RicardoRei•2h ago
LLMs have room for improvement (we show that their scores are medium-low on several dimensions).
Maybe the average human also has lots of room for improvement. One thing does not necessarily depend on the other.
the same way we can say that LLMs still have room for improvement on a specific task (lets say mathematics) but the average human is also bad at mathematics...
We don't do any claims about human therapists. Just that LLMs have room for improvement on several dimensions if we want them to be good at therapy. Showing this is the first step to improve them
crazygringo•1h ago
> Just that LLMs have room for improvement on several dimensions if we want them to be good at therapy.
That implies they're not currently good at therapy. But you haven't shown that, have you? How are you defining that a score of 4 isn't already "good"? How do you know that isn't already correlated with meaningfully improved outcomes, and therefore already "good"?
Everybody has room for improvement if you say 6 is perfection and something isn't reaching 6 on average. But that doesn't mean everybody's struggling.
I take no issue with your methodology. But your broader framing, and title, don't seem justified or objective.
nradov•2h ago
palmotea•51m ago
> I'd very much like to see clinicians randomly selected from BetterHelp and paid to interact the same way with the LLM patient and judged by the LLM, as the current methodology uses. And see what score they get.
Does it really matter? Per the OP:
>>> Across all models, average clinical performance stayed below 4 on a 1–6 scale. Performance degraded further in severe symptom scenarios and in longer conversations (40 turns vs 20).
I'd assume a real therapy session has far more "turns" than 20-40, and if model performance starts low and gets lower with longer length, it's reasonable to expect it would be worse than a human (who typically don't the the characteristic of becoming increasingly unhinged the longer you talk to them).
Also my impression is BetterHelp pays poorly and thus tends to have less skilled and overworked therapists (https://www.reddit.com/r/TalkTherapy/comments/1letko9/is_bet..., https://www.firstsession.com/resources/betterhelp-reviews-su...), e.g.
> Betterhelp is a nightmare for clients and therapists alike. Their only mission seems to be in making as much money as possible for their shareholders. Otherwise they don't seem at all interested in actually helping anyone. Stay away from Betterhelp.
So taking it as a baseline would bias any experiment against human therapists.
RicardoRei•2h ago
megaman821•2h ago
Many things can be useful before they reach the level of world's best. Although with AI, non-intuitive failure modes must be taken into consideration too.
jbgt•2h ago
Burns is really into data gathering and his app is LLM based on the rails of the TEAM process and it seems to be very well received.
I found it simple and very well done - and quite effective.
A top level comment says that therapists aren't good either - Burns would argue that mainly no one tests before and after and so no measuring effect is done.
And of people I know who see a therapist, practically none can tell me what exactly they are doing or what methods they are doing or how anything is structured.
taurath•11m ago
> And of people I know who see a therapist, practically none can tell me what exactly they are doing or what methods they are doing or how anything is structured.
I could tell you that as a client, but that’s because I’ve read into it. This is sort of like asking an ER patient to describe the shift management system of the clinic they went into.