"What Are You Really Trying to Do?": Co-Creating Life Goals from Everyday Computer Use
arXiv cs.AI / 5/4/2026
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Key Points
- The paper argues that modern user modeling can now infer aspects of a person’s intentions from everyday computer-use data, but most current systems only capture moment-by-moment actions rather than the underlying “why.”
- It introduces “striving co-creation,” a method that infers broader life goals by building a hierarchical representation of a person’s activities from unstructured computer-use observations.
- The approach is grounded in Activity Theory and Emmons’ framework of personal strivings, and it explicitly addresses the ambiguity that the same action may reflect different goals.
- To handle this, the system includes an editing interface that lets users correct how they are interpreted, using those corrections to improve subsequent inference rounds.
- In a week-long field deployment with 14 participants, the co-creation process produced strivings aligned with long-term goals and provided users more agency than baseline methods.
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