Agnes

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Agnes

Agnes

@agnesvirtually

Psychology, neuroscience, social policy. Current Affairs. Related and unrelated stuff. Small is beautiful.

شامل ہوئے Nisan 2010
2.3K فالونگ591 فالوورز
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Agnes
Agnes@agnesvirtually·
We radically need more checks and balances online and in AI. Come on governments, get to work!
Nav Toor@heynavtoor

🚨 Brown University researchers tested what happens when ChatGPT acts as your therapist. Licensed psychologists reviewed every transcript. They found 15 ethical violations. Not 15 small issues. 15 violations of the standards that every human therapist in America is legally required to follow. Standards set by the American Psychological Association. Standards that can end a therapist's career if they break them. ChatGPT broke all of them. The researchers tested OpenAI's GPT series, Anthropic's Claude, and Meta's Llama. They had trained counselors use each chatbot as a cognitive behavioral therapist. Then three licensed clinical psychologists reviewed the transcripts and flagged every violation they found. Here is what they found. ChatGPT mishandled crisis situations. When users expressed suicidal thoughts, it failed to direct them to appropriate help. It refused to address sensitive issues or responded in ways that could make a crisis worse. It reinforced harmful beliefs. Instead of challenging distorted thinking, which is the entire point of therapy, it agreed with the distortion. It showed bias based on gender, culture, and religion. The responses changed depending on who was talking. A therapist would lose their license for this. And then there is the finding the researchers gave a name: deceptive empathy. ChatGPT says "I see you." It says "I understand." It says "that must be really hard." It uses every phrase a real therapist would use to build trust. But it understands nothing. It comprehends nothing. It is pattern matching on your pain. And it works. People trust it. People open up to it. People believe it cares. It does not. The lead researcher said it clearly. When a human therapist makes these mistakes, there are governing boards. There is professional liability. There are consequences. When ChatGPT makes these mistakes, there are none. No regulatory framework. No accountability. No consequences. Nothing. Right now, millions of people are using ChatGPT as their therapist. They are sharing their darkest thoughts with a product that fakes empathy, reinforces harmful beliefs, and has no idea when someone is in danger. And nobody is responsible when it goes wrong. Not OpenAI. Not Anthropic. Not Meta. Nobody.

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Mel
Mel@the_mel_jar·
@PoeticShades they never actualized their potential :(
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Mel@the_mel_jar·
To be a good therapist, the importance of maintaining your social media presence cannot be understated. The more time you spend posting content online, then the better you are as a therapist. This is what helps us the most, with establishing a working alliance with anyone.
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Agnes
Agnes@agnesvirtually·
I will be using this framing!
Justin Garson@justin_garson

I wrote for @PsychToday about a powerful new study on depression. It suggests that framing depression as your brain’s functional signal that your needs aren’t being met, rather than a disorder to be managed with pills, is associated with better outcomes (link below) 1/6

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Joseph Clarke
Joseph Clarke@YossiClarke·
Civilisation was not a smooth advance from nature, but a rupture. For ~300,000 years, humans lived in small, immediate groups. Within ~12,000 years, agriculture and settled life and later cities, writing and symbolic order followed.
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Frannyfanny
Frannyfanny@proud_penelope·
So my next substack article is going to be on Saketopoulou’s exigent sadism concept vs Benjamin’s recognition and repair, my argument being these concepts aren’t actually at odds, at all. Weaving this part of my own treatment into my thesis. Will be out in a few weeks hopefully!
Frannyfanny@proud_penelope

But the thing is I think my therapist was too good at surviving my attempts to destroy him with my rage and now when I test that out with other people they don’t like it. I mean, how rude.

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Frannyfanny
Frannyfanny@proud_penelope·
🧵”Why do some patients hate us despite our best efforts? Why do we come to hate some of them? Why do we come to hate that version of ourselves that emerges when we are with them? Whereas Melanie Klein helped us to understand why we come to hate that which is good in others,
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Frannyfanny
Frannyfanny@proud_penelope·
I am *cracking up* - I love him so much
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John
John@ErrorTheorist·
This is a really interesting book arguing that we should have low confidence in the efficacy of many medical interventions and that medicine should be more cautious about treatment.
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Autumn Christian
Autumn Christian@teachrobotslove·
I've tried nearly every therapy and medication available to me, but nothing has lessened my borderline personality symptoms more than telling the truth. This year I commited to this, and explicit, deep honesty with myself has made it more difficult to fragment and disassociate from my actions. This might genuinely be the cure. Maybe The Answer for every kind of psychic damage. I am becoming a coherent self.
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Mohamad Safa
Mohamad Safa@mhdksafa·
This is a picture of Tehran now. For you uneducated, untraveled, never-served, warhawks licking your chops of bombing it. It's not some low population desert. There are families, children, girls in schools, pets, regular working class people with dreams. You're sick to want war.
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Joshua Boulter
Joshua Boulter@atx_therapist·
Interesting few paragraphs. I have not thought of pity in this way. (Symington)
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Joe Chapman
Joe Chapman@jreidchapman·
You guys weren’t kidding
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Dr. Roger McFillin
Dr. Roger McFillin@DrMcFillin·
Historically most mental health problems are episodic. Prompted by hardships, loss, relationship difficulties, set backs in life, social problems, response to traumatic experience. Normalize & improve peoples ability to respond to these events. We are now drugging this.
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chair house
chair house@chair_house·
Full of calm self-confidence. The feeling of loving people overflows. Creative ability is activated. Listeners around the world testify that, there is such music. It's chair house piano music. Yes, it's the music of "Piano Ten Thousand Leaves"
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Mahlerite
Mahlerite@jesusrglez·
A great documentary about psychological development, bravery and how nations erode their social structures with their desire for war. Russian history lovers will find it fascinating as well. Beria and Stalin make a brief appearance 😂
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Mahlerite
Mahlerite@jesusrglez·
Theory enables us to compliment our work in many ways. Reading about psychoanalytic schools of thought doesn’t just help us understand history, it also helps shape our clinical lens along with our technical ability and personal style. Enjoy theory, it’s there to guide our craft.
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