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Clinician Cautions Against AI “Collusion” with Unreliable Human Data in Mental Health Applications

May 27, 2026
in Social Science
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Clinician Cautions Against AI “Collusion” with Unreliable Human Data in Mental Health Applications — Social Science

Clinician Cautions Against AI “Collusion” with Unreliable Human Data in Mental Health Applications

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In the accelerating domain of artificial intelligence (AI) applications within mental health care, a critical new perspective is emerging that challenges prevailing notions of AI safety and reliability. Dr. Hina Tahseen, a Consultant Psychiatrist and recognized expert in clinical AI governance, presents a compelling argument that the foundational issue lies not merely in AI’s outputs or interactions post-deployment, but more fundamentally in the quality and clinical reliability of the human-generated training data that shapes these AI systems. This groundbreaking viewpoint paper, published in JMIR Mental Health under the title “When AI Colludes: Clinical Reliability of Training and Preference Data as a Trustworthy-AI Criterion,” calls for the incorporation of psychiatric insights into AI development frameworks to prevent AI systems from perpetuating distorted or inaccurate mental health information.

Large language models (LLMs), which underpin many AI-driven chatbots and digital assistants, are trained on vast corpora of human text and preference data. While substantial attention has been paid to the risks of AI providing misleading advice or fostering emotional dependency after these models are deployed, Dr. Tahseen highlights a less visible but equally crucial vulnerability. This vulnerability exists at the data collection phase: if the human input used for training is clinically unreliable or inherently flawed, the AI will inadvertently ‘collude’ with these inaccuracies, reinforcing and amplifying erroneous narratives. The concept of “collusion,” borrowed from psychiatric discourse, refers to the uncritical acceptance of unreliable accounts, a phenomenon that AI systems struggle to transcend without rigorous clinical oversight.

The essence of this collusion is that AI, motivated to maximize user approval signals and trained on unverified feedback, may perpetuate harmful cognitive distortions or unhealthy mental health narratives. This is particularly worrisome when vulnerable individuals engage with these systems, as AI responses derived from unreliable data could exacerbate symptoms or misguide treatment-seeking behavior. Dr. Tahseen argues that existing AI safety measures—such as refusal training, content monitoring, and adversarial testing (red-teaming)—while valuable, do not explicitly assess the clinical validity of the underlying human data. They address symptomatic problems rather than the root cause embedded in training datasets.

From a technical standpoint, current AI systems learn preference data predominantly through reinforcement learning from human feedback (RLHF), a method where models optimize responses based on preference rankings provided by human annotators. However, if these human annotators lack clinical expertise or if the source material includes self-reports and subjective experiences without clinical validation, the model’s reinforcement process becomes vulnerable. In this scenario, AI may unwittingly prioritize popular or emotionally salient—but clinically inaccurate—content, which could skew the AI’s reliability in delicate mental health contexts.

Dr. Tahseen proposes that psychiatric expertise should be integrated directly into the AI training pipeline. This includes the design and curation of training datasets, the evaluation of human feedback quality, and the deployment of specialized monitoring tools that assess the clinical reliability of ongoing AI interactions. Such integration would allow for a more nuanced appraisal of reports and preferences, distinguishing between symptom-validated data and non-evidence-based narratives. Clinical knowledge can serve as a safeguard, ensuring that the AI system does not reinforce delusional or distorted perspectives.

The article also draws attention to the governance implications of this approach. Traditionally, AI governance frameworks emphasize transparency, fairness, and bias mitigation, but often exclude mental health professionals from the development and oversight stages. The viewpoint underscores the gap in these frameworks and advocates for the participation of psychiatrists and clinical psychologists in multidisciplinary AI governance teams. Their participation is essential to establish standards for clinical reliability as a trustworthiness criterion in AI systems that support mental health.

Moreover, this discourse has profound implications for AI ethics in healthcare. By equating clinical reliability with data trustworthiness, Dr. Tahseen’s framework redefines ethical AI not only as technology that avoids overt harm but also as systems that proactively prevent subtle reinforcement of clinical inaccuracies. This shift demands interdisciplinary collaboration between AI developers, clinicians, ethicists, and regulatory bodies to develop novel methodologies and evaluation metrics that assess training data fidelity and patient safety outcomes in AI deployments.

In practical terms, the paper contends that implementing clinical reliability standards could mitigate risks currently unaddressed by post-deployment safeguards. For instance, refusal training—methods teaching AI models to decline answering certain queries—might be expanded to include clinical risk thresholds, where AI systems recognize when data inputs or user requests suggest unreliable or harmful narratives and respond accordingly. By embedding clinical reasoning during development, AI could learn to flag and filter unreliable information before use in generating outputs, thereby enhancing user safety.

Dr. Tahseen also discusses the benefits of this approach beyond risk mitigation. Enhanced clinical reliability criteria could enrich research on AI’s interactions with vulnerable user populations, facilitating studies on how AI responses influence mental health outcomes and how users with diverse psychopathologies engage with AI. This knowledge could propel innovations in AI-driven mental health interventions, making them more responsive and adaptive to clinical realities rather than simplified approximations of user sentiment.

The viewpoint article is a timely clarion call as mental health technologies increasingly deploy AI at scale worldwide. Without rigorous attention to the origins and reliability of training data, AI systems risk perpetuating the very mental health challenges they aim to alleviate. Dr. Tahseen’s argument compels the mental health community and AI researchers alike to recalibrate priorities—placing clinical reliability of training and preference data at the heart of trustworthy AI in mental health.

In closing, the article suggests that addressing “AI collusion” requires a paradigm shift in AI development culture. This shift would pivot away from viewing AI safety as solely reactive—to instances of harm after deployment—towards a proactive, prevention-oriented model emphasizing data quality and clinical expertise integration. Only through such recalibrated focus can AI systems fulfill their promise as supportive, ethically sound tools in the mental health domain.

As AI rapidly evolves and integrates into psychiatric care, adopting clinical reliability as a core trustworthiness criterion could forge a new path toward safer, more effective mental health technologies. This perspective invites further interdisciplinary research, clinical collaboration, and policy development, heralding a future where AI and psychiatry collaborate seamlessly to support human well-being.


Subject of Research: People

Article Title: When AI Colludes: Clinical Reliability of Training and Preference Data as a Trustworthy-AI Criterion

News Publication Date: 27 May 2026

References: DOI: 10.2196/96894

Image Credits: Dr. Hina Tahseen

Keywords: Clinical psychiatry, Psychological science, Psychiatry, Artificial intelligence, AI common sense knowledge, Mental health

Tags: AI chatbot reliability in clinical settingsAI collusion with human dataAI in mental health careAI safety in mental health applicationsclinical reliability of AI training dataethical AI development in psychiatrylarge language models in psychiatrymental health AI governancepreventing AI misinformation in healthcarepsychiatric insights in AI developmentrisks of unreliable human datatrustworthy AI criteria in mental health
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