Sandra Just
2026
Evaluation of Multilingual Text Simplification for the Mental Health Domain: Exploring Small Language Models
Olga Pelloni | Sandra Just | Lars Bongo
BioNLP 2026
Olga Pelloni | Sandra Just | Lars Bongo
BioNLP 2026
Individuals with particular mental health disorders may find it difficult to learn about their own condition. Therefore, efforts have been made to create materials that explain complex medical information in simpler words, which are also beneficial for caregivers and others. However, text simplification is commonly done in English and only sporadically in other languages. In this study, we explore potential ways for language-agnostic medical text simplification for the mental health domain. Our approach is to simplify the ICD-11 articles on primary psychotic disorders in English, German and French, using small LMs and various metrics for evaluating different aspects of the texts: lexical complexity and readability. Our results show that acceptable texts were produced only in English, and that a joint analysis of Measure of Textual Lexical Diversity (MTLD) and Flesch Reading Ease (FRE) provides the most insight, capturing both the best outcomes and signaling different types of issue. The study is preliminary and requires further investigation.
2019
Coherence models in schizophrenia
Sandra Just | Erik Haegert | Nora Kořánová | Anna-Lena Bröcker | Ivan Nenchev | Jakob Funcke | Christiane Montag | Manfred Stede
Proceedings of the Sixth Workshop on Computational Linguistics and Clinical Psychology
Sandra Just | Erik Haegert | Nora Kořánová | Anna-Lena Bröcker | Ivan Nenchev | Jakob Funcke | Christiane Montag | Manfred Stede
Proceedings of the Sixth Workshop on Computational Linguistics and Clinical Psychology
Incoherent discourse in schizophrenia has long been recognized as a dominant symptom of the mental disorder (Bleuler, 1911/1950). Recent studies have used modern sentence and word embeddings to compute coherence metrics for spontaneous speech in schizophrenia. While clinical ratings always have a subjective element, computational linguistic methodology allows quantification of speech abnormalities. Clinical and empirical knowledge from psychiatry provide the theoretical and conceptual basis for modelling. Our study is an interdisciplinary attempt at improving coherence models in schizophrenia. Speech samples were obtained from healthy controls and patients with a diagnosis of schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder and different severity of positive formal thought disorder. Interviews were transcribed and coherence metrics derived from different embeddings. One model found higher coherence metrics for controls than patients. All other models remained non-significant. More detailed analysis of the data motivates different approaches to improving coherence models in schizophrenia, e.g. by assessing referential abnormalities.