@inproceedings{sil-etal-2026-effective,
title = "How effective are {VLM}s in assisting humans in inferring the quality of mental models from Multimodal short answers?",
author = "Sil, Pritam and
Karnam, Durgaprasad and
Venumuddala, Vinay Reddy and
Bhattacharyya, Pushpak",
editor = "Demberg, Vera and
Inui, Kentaro and
Marquez, Llu{\'i}s",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 19th Conference of the {E}uropean Chapter of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)",
month = mar,
year = "2026",
address = "Rabat, Morocco",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://aclanthology.org/2026.eacl-long.50/",
pages = "1130--1140",
ISBN = "979-8-89176-380-7",
abstract = "STEM Mental models can play a critical role in assessing students' conceptual understanding of a topic. They not only offer insights into what students know but also into how effectively they can apply, relate to, and integrate concepts across various contexts. Thus, students' responses are critical markers of the quality of their understanding and not entities that should be merely graded. However, inferring these mental models from student answers is challenging as it requires deep reasoning skills. We propose MMGrader, an approach that infers the quality of students' mental models from their multimodal responses using concept graphs as an analytical framework. In our evaluation with 9 openly available models, we found that the best-performing models fall short of human-level performance. This is because they only achieved an accuracy of approximately 40{\%}, a prediction error of 1.1 units, and a scoring distribution fairly aligned with human scoring patterns. With improved accuracy, these can be highly effective assistants to teachers in inferring the mental models of their entire classrooms, enabling them to do so efficiently and help improve their pedagogies more effectively by designing targeted help sessions and lectures that strengthen areas where students collectively demonstrate lower proficiency."
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<abstract>STEM Mental models can play a critical role in assessing students’ conceptual understanding of a topic. They not only offer insights into what students know but also into how effectively they can apply, relate to, and integrate concepts across various contexts. Thus, students’ responses are critical markers of the quality of their understanding and not entities that should be merely graded. However, inferring these mental models from student answers is challenging as it requires deep reasoning skills. We propose MMGrader, an approach that infers the quality of students’ mental models from their multimodal responses using concept graphs as an analytical framework. In our evaluation with 9 openly available models, we found that the best-performing models fall short of human-level performance. This is because they only achieved an accuracy of approximately 40%, a prediction error of 1.1 units, and a scoring distribution fairly aligned with human scoring patterns. With improved accuracy, these can be highly effective assistants to teachers in inferring the mental models of their entire classrooms, enabling them to do so efficiently and help improve their pedagogies more effectively by designing targeted help sessions and lectures that strengthen areas where students collectively demonstrate lower proficiency.</abstract>
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%0 Conference Proceedings
%T How effective are VLMs in assisting humans in inferring the quality of mental models from Multimodal short answers?
%A Sil, Pritam
%A Karnam, Durgaprasad
%A Venumuddala, Vinay Reddy
%A Bhattacharyya, Pushpak
%Y Demberg, Vera
%Y Inui, Kentaro
%Y Marquez, Lluís
%S Proceedings of the 19th Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)
%D 2026
%8 March
%I Association for Computational Linguistics
%C Rabat, Morocco
%@ 979-8-89176-380-7
%F sil-etal-2026-effective
%X STEM Mental models can play a critical role in assessing students’ conceptual understanding of a topic. They not only offer insights into what students know but also into how effectively they can apply, relate to, and integrate concepts across various contexts. Thus, students’ responses are critical markers of the quality of their understanding and not entities that should be merely graded. However, inferring these mental models from student answers is challenging as it requires deep reasoning skills. We propose MMGrader, an approach that infers the quality of students’ mental models from their multimodal responses using concept graphs as an analytical framework. In our evaluation with 9 openly available models, we found that the best-performing models fall short of human-level performance. This is because they only achieved an accuracy of approximately 40%, a prediction error of 1.1 units, and a scoring distribution fairly aligned with human scoring patterns. With improved accuracy, these can be highly effective assistants to teachers in inferring the mental models of their entire classrooms, enabling them to do so efficiently and help improve their pedagogies more effectively by designing targeted help sessions and lectures that strengthen areas where students collectively demonstrate lower proficiency.
%U https://aclanthology.org/2026.eacl-long.50/
%P 1130-1140
Markdown (Informal)
[How effective are VLMs in assisting humans in inferring the quality of mental models from Multimodal short answers?](https://aclanthology.org/2026.eacl-long.50/) (Sil et al., EACL 2026)
ACL