Florian Onur Kuhlmeier
florianonur.bsky.social
Florian Onur Kuhlmeier
@florianonur.bsky.social
Postdoctoral researcher | research on mental health chatbots | human-centered systems lab @kit.edu
Reposted by Florian Onur Kuhlmeier
JMIR HumanFactors: Designing Chatbots to Treat Depression in Youth: Qualitative Study
Designing Chatbots to Treat Depression in Youth: Qualitative Study
Background: Depression is a severe and prevalent mental disorder among youth that requires professional care; however, various barriers hinder access to effective treatments. Chatbots, one of the latest innovations in the research on digital mental health interventions (DMHIs), have shown potential in addressing these barriers. However, most studies on how to design chatbots to treat depression have focused on adult populations or prevention in the general population. Objective: This study aimed to investigate the problems faced by youth with depression and their adaptive coping strategies, as well as attitudes, expectations, and design preferences for chatbots designed to treat depression. Methods: We conducted a qualitative study, consisting of a semi-structured interview and a concurrent think-aloud session, in which participants interacted with a chatbot prototype with 14 youth with a current or remitted depressive episode. Results: The participants reported a wide range of problems beyond core depressive symptoms, such as interpersonal challenges, concerns about school and the future, and problems with human therapists. Adaptive coping strategies varied, with most seeking social support or engaging in pleasant activities. Attitudes towards chatbots for depression treatment were predominantly positive, with participants expressing less anxiety about using a chatbot than about seeing a human therapist. Participants showed diverse and partially contradictory design preferences, which included diverse dialogue topics, such as discussing daily life, acute problems, and therapeutic exercises, as well as various preferences for personality, language use, and personalization of the chatbot. Conclusions: Our study provides a comprehensive foundation for designing chatbots that meet the unique needs and design preferences of youth with depression. These findings can inform the design of engaging and effective chatbots tailored to this vulnerable population.
dlvr.it
June 19, 2025 at 5:46 PM
Finally published! 🎉 check it out: humanfactors.jmir.org/2025/1/e66632. @jmirpub.bsky.social
June 20, 2025 at 7:39 AM
Reposted by Florian Onur Kuhlmeier
Published today in Nature Medicine. In one of the world’s largest RCTs of its kind (n=3,936), a smartphone app teaching 5 key cognitive-behavioral therapy skills improved subthreshold depression—and the effects lasted 6 months.

www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Cognitive behavioral therapy skills via a smartphone app for subthreshold depression among adults in the community: the RESiLIENT randomized controlled trial - Nature Medicine
A trial that used a master randomized design found that the skills commonly found in smartphone-based cognitive behavioral therapy, when tested alone or in combination with behavioral activation, were...
www.nature.com
April 23, 2025 at 10:01 AM
Reposted by Florian Onur Kuhlmeier
🚨 REPLICATION REPORT UPDATE: One year ago, a tweet by John Holbein alerted me, @ollefolke.bsky.social, and @jopieboy.bsky.social to a paper with a shocking result about Sweden’s law criminalizing the purchase of sex.🧵
May 9, 2025 at 9:29 AM
Ich durfte beim @deutschlandfunk.de.web.brid.gy über unsere Forschung zu LLM-basierten Chatbots und erste Tests mit LLM-basierten Nutzer:innen sprechen. Der zugehörige Preprint kommt bis Ende des Monats! 🤞

www.deutschlandfunk.de/ki-therapeut...
KI-Apps für Psychotherapie: Hilfe bei psychischen Erkrankungen
KI-Systeme zeigen Potenzial für die Behandlung psychischer Erkrankungen. Obwohl sie keine Empathie haben, können sie die Therapie von Patienten unterstützen.
www.deutschlandfunk.de
March 6, 2025 at 6:56 AM
Reposted by Florian Onur Kuhlmeier
November 18, 2024 at 4:17 PM
Reposted by Florian Onur Kuhlmeier
Understanding and communicating uncertainty should be a major ethical obligation for scientists. Currently it's largely viewed as a side quest. "Let's disseminate the results, we'll deal with the rest later when we have time" should never fly. Dealing with uncertainty *is* the job of a scientist.
November 2, 2024 at 3:52 PM
It’s taken too long, but I’ve finally published the preprint of the first study of my PhD: preprints.jmir.org/preprint/66632
How to design a chatbot to treat depression among youth? Insights from an exploratory mixed-methods study.
Background: Depression is a severe and prevalent mental disorder among youth that requires professional care, but various barriers hinder access to effective treatments. Chatbots, the latest...
preprints.jmir.org
October 24, 2024 at 4:08 PM