@inproceedings{thummar-perez-rosas-2026-responses,
title = "From Responses to Trajectories: Modeling the Development of Reflective Listening Skills",
author = "Thummar, Dhruvil and
P{\'e}rez-Rosas, Ver{\'o}nica",
editor = "Zirikly, Aya and
Bar, Kfir and
MacAvaney, Sean and
Ireland, Molly and
Ophir, Yaakov and
Atzil-Slonim, Dana and
Varadarajan, Vasudha and
Bedrick, Steven and
Desmet, Bart",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 10th Workshop on Computational Linguistics and Clinical Psychology ({CLP}sych 2026)",
month = jul,
year = "2026",
address = "San Diego, California, USA",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://aclanthology.org/2026.clpsych-1.18/",
pages = "238--243",
ISBN = "979-8-89176-421-7",
abstract = "Reflective listening is a core counseling skill that supports effective communication in mental and behavioral health. Understanding how this skill develops over time is critical for designing scalable training and feedback systems.In this paper, we study how counseling trainees develop reflective listening skills over time. Using a real-world dataset of 6,196 trainee responses, we model responses as trajectories in semantic embedding space and apply residual embeddings and similarity-based metrics to quantify week-to-week learning progression.Our analyses reveal systematic changes, including increased semantic alignment and reduced variability, consistent with consolidation of reflective listening skills. We further show that these trajectory patterns are accompanied by subtle linguistic shifts associated with effective counseling practice."
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<abstract>Reflective listening is a core counseling skill that supports effective communication in mental and behavioral health. Understanding how this skill develops over time is critical for designing scalable training and feedback systems.In this paper, we study how counseling trainees develop reflective listening skills over time. Using a real-world dataset of 6,196 trainee responses, we model responses as trajectories in semantic embedding space and apply residual embeddings and similarity-based metrics to quantify week-to-week learning progression.Our analyses reveal systematic changes, including increased semantic alignment and reduced variability, consistent with consolidation of reflective listening skills. We further show that these trajectory patterns are accompanied by subtle linguistic shifts associated with effective counseling practice.</abstract>
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%0 Conference Proceedings
%T From Responses to Trajectories: Modeling the Development of Reflective Listening Skills
%A Thummar, Dhruvil
%A Pérez-Rosas, Verónica
%Y Zirikly, Aya
%Y Bar, Kfir
%Y MacAvaney, Sean
%Y Ireland, Molly
%Y Ophir, Yaakov
%Y Atzil-Slonim, Dana
%Y Varadarajan, Vasudha
%Y Bedrick, Steven
%Y Desmet, Bart
%S Proceedings of the 10th Workshop on Computational Linguistics and Clinical Psychology (CLPsych 2026)
%D 2026
%8 July
%I Association for Computational Linguistics
%C San Diego, California, USA
%@ 979-8-89176-421-7
%F thummar-perez-rosas-2026-responses
%X Reflective listening is a core counseling skill that supports effective communication in mental and behavioral health. Understanding how this skill develops over time is critical for designing scalable training and feedback systems.In this paper, we study how counseling trainees develop reflective listening skills over time. Using a real-world dataset of 6,196 trainee responses, we model responses as trajectories in semantic embedding space and apply residual embeddings and similarity-based metrics to quantify week-to-week learning progression.Our analyses reveal systematic changes, including increased semantic alignment and reduced variability, consistent with consolidation of reflective listening skills. We further show that these trajectory patterns are accompanied by subtle linguistic shifts associated with effective counseling practice.
%U https://aclanthology.org/2026.clpsych-1.18/
%P 238-243
Markdown (Informal)
[From Responses to Trajectories: Modeling the Development of Reflective Listening Skills](https://aclanthology.org/2026.clpsych-1.18/) (Thummar & Pérez-Rosas, CLPsych 2026)
ACL