University of Illinois Chicago
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Cognitive plausibility in voice-based AI health counselors

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posted on 2025-06-24, 18:12 authored by Thomas Kannampallil, Joshua M Smyth, Steven JonesSteven Jones, Philip RO Payne, Jun MaJun Ma
Voice-based personal assistants using artificial intelligence (AI) have been widely adopted and used in home-based settings. Their success has created considerable interest for its use in healthcare applications; one area of prolific growth in AI is that of voice-based virtual counselors for mental health and well-being. However, in spite of its promise, building realistic virtual counselors to achieve higher-order maturity levels beyond task-based interactions presents considerable conceptual and pragmatic challenges. We describe one such conceptual challenge-cognitive plausibility, defined as the ability of virtual counselors to emulate the human cognitive system by simulating how a skill or function is accomplished. An important cognitive plausibility consideration for voice-based agents is its ability to engage in meaningful and seamless interactive communication. Drawing on a broad interdisciplinary research literature and based on our experiences with developing two voice-based (voice-only) prototypes that are in the early phases of testing, we articulate two conceptual considerations for their design and use-conceptualizing voice-based virtual counselors as communicative agents and establishing virtual co-presence. We discuss why these conceptual considerations are important and how it can lead to the development of voice-based counselors for real-world use.

History

Citation

Kannampallil, T., Smyth, J. M., Jones, S., Payne, P. R. O.Ma, J. (2020). Cognitive plausibility in voice-based AI health counselors. npj Digital Medicine, 3(1), 72-. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41746-020-0278-7

Publisher

Springer Nature

Language

  • en

issn

2398-6352