CLAIMay 26

UserHarness: Harnessing User Minds for Stronger Agent Theory-of-Mind

arXiv:2605.2772179.9h-index: 8
Predicted impact top 66% in CL · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

For AI assistants, this provides a simple yet effective framework for understanding user beliefs and intentions, outperforming complex pipelines.

UserHarness reframes Theory-of-Mind reasoning as explicit user-mind reconstruction, achieving up to 95.94% macro accuracy across five benchmarks, improving over existing methods by more than 15% relative.

Understanding what a user believes and intends is central to building effective agent assistants. This ability is often evaluated through Theory-of-Mind (ToM) tasks, where success requires reasoning from the user's perspective. However, many existing approaches address ToM with complex pipelines that model behavior indirectly, without explicitly reconstructing the user's mental state. This misses the core structure of the problem: users act based on their beliefs, which are updated through observations of the environment; beliefs and intentions jointly determine actions, which in turn change the environment; and social reasoning often requires nested beliefs about what others believe or intend. We propose UserHarness, a simple framework that reframes ToM reasoning as explicit user-mind reconstruction. UserHarness decomposes the user's mental state, its relation to the external environment, and the actions that follow from it, enabling agents to track what the user observes, believes, intends, and does. Across five benchmarks, UserHarness reaches up to 95.94% macro accuracy, improving over existing inference methods by more than 15% relative and over the strongest prompt-only harness by about 20% relative. These results suggest that robust user understanding requires reasoning from the roots of the user's mind, positioning user harnessing as a promising foundation for more adaptive future assistants.

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