Shasha Han

h-index2
2papers

2 Papers

12.1HCMay 1
DySRec: Dynamic Context-Aware Psychometric Scale Recommendation via Multi-Agent Collaboration

Yanzeng Li, Xiaoning Cao, Jialun Zhong et al.

Choosing suitable psychometric scales is an essential and difficult step in psychological consultation, which requires clinicians to integrate patient information, behaviors, and dynamic contextual information. Existing systems mainly use static pipelines to choose scale, or directly predict symptoms according to user inputs, limiting their ability to support dynamic assessment, risk management, and transparent decision-making. To address these limitations, we propose DySRec, a multi-agent conversational system for dynamic psychometric scale recommendation. DySRec operates as an interactive chatbot that engages users in multi-turn dialogue, models scale selection as a continuous conversational decision process, and coordinates specialized agents to maintain user context, recommend assessment scales, monitor psychological risk, and log decision trajectories. In this way, DySRec can integrate and capture heterogeneous signals, including semantic, interaction behaviors, assessment history, and content state, to dynamically update user representations and calculate scale-context compatibility score for recommending most matched scales. Moreover, DySRec incorporates a closed-loop refinement mechanism. Recommendation agent will feedback the missing or uncertain attributes and guide the conversation to elicit the targeted information. In this paper, we showcase the prototype design and architecture of DySRec, and this system has been verified in a real-world application.

LGApr 28, 2025
Identification and Estimation of Long-Term Treatment Effects with Monotone Missing

Qinwei Yang, Ruocheng Guo, Shasha Han et al.

Estimating long-term treatment effects has a wide range of applications in various domains. A key feature in this context is that collecting long-term outcomes typically involves a multi-stage process and is subject to monotone missing, where individuals missing at an earlier stage remain missing at subsequent stages. Despite its prevalence, monotone missing has been rarely explored in previous studies on estimating long-term treatment effects. In this paper, we address this gap by introducing the sequential missingness assumption for identification. We propose three novel estimation methods, including inverse probability weighting, sequential regression imputation, and sequential marginal structural model (SeqMSM). Considering that the SeqMSM method may suffer from high variance due to severe data sparsity caused by monotone missing, we further propose a novel balancing-enhanced approach, BalanceNet, to improve the stability and accuracy of the estimation methods. Extensive experiments on two widely used benchmark datasets demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposed methods.