Paper List
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Autonomous Agents Coordinating Distributed Discovery Through Emergent Artifact Exchange
This paper addresses the fundamental limitation of current AI-assisted scientific research by enabling truly autonomous, decentralized investigation w...
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D-MEM: Dopamine-Gated Agentic Memory via Reward Prediction Error Routing
This paper addresses the fundamental scalability bottleneck in LLM agentic memory systems: the O(N²) computational complexity and unbounded API token ...
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Countershading coloration in blue shark skin emerges from hierarchically organized and spatially tuned photonic architectures inside skin denticles
This paper solves the core problem of how blue sharks achieve their striking dorsoventral countershading camouflage, revealing that coloration origina...
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Human-like Object Grouping in Self-supervised Vision Transformers
This paper addresses the core challenge of quantifying how well self-supervised vision models capture human-like object grouping in natural scenes, br...
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Hierarchical pp-Adic Framework for Gene Regulatory Networks: Theory and Stability Analysis
This paper addresses the core challenge of mathematically capturing the inherent hierarchical organization and multi-scale stability of gene regulator...
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Towards unified brain-to-text decoding across speech production and perception
This paper addresses the core challenge of developing a unified brain-to-text decoding framework that works across both speech production and percepti...
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Dual-Laws Model for a theory of artificial consciousness
This paper addresses the core challenge of developing a comprehensive, testable theory of consciousness that bridges biological and artificial systems...
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Pulse desynchronization of neural populations by targeting the centroid of the limit cycle in phase space
This work addresses the core challenge of determining optimal pulse timing and intensity for desynchronizing pathological neural oscillations when the...
Human-Centred Evaluation of Text-to-Image Generation Models for Self-expression of Mental Distress: A Dataset Based on GPT-4o
School of Culture and Communication, Swansea University, United Kingdom | Department of Informatics, University of Oslo, Norway
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This paper addresses the critical gap in evaluating how AI-generated images can effectively support cross-cultural mental distress communication, particularly for international students facing linguistic and cultural barriers.
核心创新
- Methodology Introduces the first publicly available text-to-image evaluation dataset with human judgment scores specifically for mental health communication, comprising 100 textual descriptions, 400 AI-generated images, and 400 categorical evaluation scores.
- Methodology Develops and evaluates four persona-based prompt templates (basic, illustrator, photographer, creative artist) rooted in contemporary counselling practices, with the illustrator persona achieving the highest total helpfulness score (284 out of possible 600).
- Biology Demonstrates that AI-generated images can facilitate self-expression of mental distress, with 44% of images rated as 'slightly helpful' and 27% as 'helpful', achieving a mean helpfulness score of 2.4 on a 0-6 scale.
主要结论
- The illustrator persona prompt achieved the highest total helpfulness score (284) and was selected as the 'best' image in 31% of cases, significantly outperforming other prompts (basic: 252, creative artist: 218, photographer: 210).
- Human evaluation shows minimal correlation with automatic semantic alignment metrics (Spearman's ρ=0.0271, Kendall's τ=0.0201), highlighting the need for emotion-aware evaluation frameworks beyond traditional similarity measures.
- AI-generated images demonstrated positive utility for mental distress expression, with 71% of images rated as at least 'slightly helpful' (score ≥2) and only 29% rated as 'not helpful' (score=0).
摘要: Effective communication is central to achieving positive healthcare outcomes in mental health contexts, yet international students often face linguistic and cultural barriers that hinder their communication of mental distress. In this study, we evaluate the effectiveness of AI-generated images in supporting self-expression of mental distress. To achieve this, twenty Chinese international students studying at UK universities were invited to describe their personal experiences of mental distress. These descriptions were elaborated using GPT-4o with four persona-based prompt templates rooted in contemporary counselling practice to generate corresponding images. Participants then evaluated the helpfulness of generated images in facilitating the expression of their feelings based on their original descriptions. The resulting dataset comprises 100 textual descriptions of mental distress, 400 generated images, and corresponding human evaluation scores. Findings indicate that prompt design substantially affects perceived helpfulness, with the illustrator persona achieving the highest ratings. This work introduces the first publicly available text-to-image evaluation dataset with human judgment scores in the mental health domain, offering valuable resources for image evaluation, reinforcement learning with human feedback, and multi-modal research on mental health communication.