Scott M. Feltman
2026
From Word Sequences to Behavioral Sequences: Adapting Modeling and Evaluation Paradigms for Longitudinal NLP
Adithya V Ganesan | Vasudha Varadarajan | Oscar Kjell | Whitney Ringwald | Scott M. Feltman | Benjamin J. Luft | Roman Kotov | Ryan L. Boyd | H. Andrew Schwartz
Proceedings of the 64th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)
Adithya V Ganesan | Vasudha Varadarajan | Oscar Kjell | Whitney Ringwald | Scott M. Feltman | Benjamin J. Luft | Roman Kotov | Ryan L. Boyd | H. Andrew Schwartz
Proceedings of the 64th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)
While NLP typically treats documents as independent and unordered samples, in longitudinal studies, this assumption rarely holds: documents are nested within authors and ordered in time, forming person-indexed, time-ordered behavioral sequences.Here, we demonstrate the need for and propose a longitudinal modeling and evaluation paradigm that consequently updates four parts of the NLP pipeline: (1) evaluation splits aligned to generalization over people (cross-sectional) and/or time (prospective); (2) accuracy metrics separating between-person differences from within-person dynamics; (3) sequence inputs to incorporate history by default; and (4) model internals that support different coarseness of latent state over histories (pooled summaries, explicit dynamics, or interaction-based models).We demonstrate the issues ensued by traditional pipeline and our proposed improvements on a dataset of 17k daily diary transcripts paired with PTSD symptom severity from 238 participants, finding that traditional document-level evaluation can yield substantially different and sometimes reversed conclusions compared to our ecologically valid modeling and evaluation. We tie our results to a broader discussion motivating a shift from word-sequence evaluation toward behavior-sequence paradigms for NLP.