# Artificial intelligence in the psychologist’s toolkit: Psypilot as a case study

**Authors:** Pablo Roca, Rosaria Maria Zangri, Guillermo Rodriguez-Fernandez, Martin Sanchez-Pedreño, Eduardo P. García del Valle

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2026.1775464 · 2026-02-27

## TL;DR

This paper explores how AI can support psychologists as a tool rather than a replacement, using Psypilot as an example of an AI-powered platform for mental health care.

## Contribution

The paper introduces Psypilot as a case study of an AI copilot for mental health and outlines design principles for responsible AI integration in psychology.

## Key findings

- AI can enhance clinical tasks like assessment and documentation when used as a supportive tool.
- Key risks include automation bias and data fairness, which must be addressed through governance and design.
- Psypilot demonstrates how AI can be embedded into workflows to support precision mental health.

## Abstract

Artificial intelligence (AI) is rapidly reshaping how psychology is practiced, from assessment and case formulation to intervention planning, monitoring, and documentation. Yet the field faces a strategic choice: deploy AI as a substitutive “automated therapist,” or develop AI copilots that augment psychologists’ judgment while preserving the relational and ethical core of professional work. In this article, we synthesize how contemporary AI-especially Machine Learning and Large Language Models- maps onto psychologists’ core tasks and discuss the implications for clinical quality, scalability, and innovation in real-world settings. We then present Psypilot as a case study of the copilot paradigm: an AI-powered clinical assistance platform designed to support Precision Mental Health. We critically examine key risks and governance challenges such as automation bias, data representativeness and fairness, privacy and secondary use, transparency, and accountability under emerging regulatory frameworks, and translate them into practical design and training recommendations. By framing AI as workflow-embedded decision support rather than autonomous care, this contribution advances responsible innovation and clarifies the competencies psychologists need to thrive in an AI-driven professional landscape.

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12982404/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12982404