Modeling Multi-Party Interaction in Couples Therapy:
A Multi-Agent Simulation Approach.

Canwen Wang*, Angela Chen*, Catherine Bao, Siwei Jin, Yee Kit Chan, Sijia Xie,

Holly Swartz, Tongshuang Wu, Robert Kraut, and Haiyi Zhu.

last updated-Nov.2025

last updated-Nov.2025

Couples therapy, or relationship counseling, helps partners resolve conflicts, improve satisfaction, and foster psychological growth. Traditional approaches to training couples therapists, such as textbooks and roleplay, often fail to capture the complexity and emotional nuance of real couple dynamics. We present a novel multimodal, multi-agent simulation system that models multi-party interactions in couples therapy. Informed by our systematic research, this system creates a low-stakes environment for trainee therapists to gain valuable practical experience dealing with the critical demand-withdraw communication cycle across six couple-interaction stages. In an evaluation study involving 21 US-based licensed therapists, participants blind to conditions identified the engineered agent behaviors (i.e., the stages and the demand-withdraw cycle) and rated overall realism and agent responses higher for the experimental system than the baseline. As the first known multi-agent framework for training couples therapists, our work builds the foundation for future research that fuses HCI technologies with couples therapy.

Submitted to CHI'26

Demo showcasing the Escalation stage, where the two agents engage in a conflict.


 Example conversation snippets for each stage from an actual simulation session

 Example conversation snippets for each stage from an actual simulation session

A screenshot of the interface showing full features of our system