Toward Impactful Collaborations on Computing and Mental Health

We describe an initiative to bring mental health researchers, computer scientists, human-computer interaction researchers, and other communities together to address the challenges of the global mental ill health epidemic. Two face-to-face events and one special issue of the Journal of Medical Internet Research were organized. The works presented in these events and publication reflect key state-of-the-art research in this interdisciplinary collaboration. We summarize the special issue articles and contextualize them to present a picture of the most recent research. In addition, we describe a series of collaborative activities held during the second symposium and where the community identified 5 challenges and their possible solutions.

[1]  J. Landay,et al.  Evaluating In-Car Movements in the Design of Mindful Commute Interventions: Exploratory Study , 2017, Journal of medical Internet research.

[2]  R. Calvo,et al.  Application of Synchronous Text-Based Dialogue Systems in Mental Health Interventions: Systematic Review , 2017, Journal of medical Internet research.

[3]  A. Laireiter,et al.  DynAMo: A Modular Platform for Monitoring Process, Outcome, and Algorithm-Based Treatment Planning in Psychotherapy , 2017, JMIR medical informatics.

[4]  Jari Saramäki,et al.  Data Collection for Mental Health Studies Through Digital Platforms: Requirements and Design of a Prototype , 2017, JMIR research protocols.

[5]  Anders Hedman,et al.  Designing, Prototyping and Evaluating Digital Mindfulness Applications: A Case Study of Mindful Breathing for Stress Reduction , 2017, Journal of Medical Internet Research.

[6]  Masooda N. Bashir,et al.  Users’ Adoption of Mental Health Apps: Examining the Impact of Information Cues , 2017, JMIR mHealth and uHealth.

[7]  John Torous,et al.  2nd Symposia on Computing and Mental Health , 2017, CHI 2017.

[8]  Orianna Demasi,et al.  Automated Text Messaging as an Adjunct to Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Depression: A Clinical Trial , 2017, Journal of medical Internet research.

[9]  Edwin D Boudreaux,et al.  Health Evaluation and Referral Assistant: A Randomized Controlled Trial of a Web-Based Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment System to Reduce Risky Alcohol Use Among Emergency Department Patients , 2017, Journal of medical Internet research.

[10]  Ingmar Weber,et al.  Characterizing Awareness of Schizophrenia Among Facebook Users by Leveraging Facebook Advertisement Estimates , 2017, Journal of medical Internet research.

[11]  C. Camargo,et al.  Computer Administered Safety Planning for Individuals at Risk for Suicide: Development and Usability Testing , 2017, Journal of medical Internet research.

[12]  Stefan Scherer,et al.  The Multimodal Assessment of Adult Attachment Security: Developing the Biometric Attachment Test , 2017, Journal of medical Internet research.

[13]  Dorian Peters,et al.  Young People’s Preferences for an Asthma Self-Management App Highlight Psychological Needs: A Participatory Study , 2017, Journal of medical Internet research.

[14]  Konrad P Kording,et al.  Scalable Passive Sleep Monitoring Using Mobile Phones: Opportunities and Obstacles , 2017, Journal of medical Internet research.

[15]  Regan Lee Mandryk,et al.  Toward Game-Based Digital Mental Health Interventions: Player Habits and Preferences , 2017, Journal of medical Internet research.

[16]  Laura E. Barnes,et al.  Using Mobile Sensing to Test Clinical Models of Depression, Social Anxiety, State Affect, and Social Isolation Among College Students , 2017, Journal of medical Internet research.

[17]  Mike Conway,et al.  Longitudinal Changes in Psychological States in Online Health Community Members: Understanding the Long-Term Effects of Participating in an Online Depression Community , 2017, Journal of medical Internet research.

[18]  E. Baca-García,et al.  Microsoft Kinect-based Continuous Performance Test: An Objective Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Assessment , 2017, Journal of medical Internet research.

[19]  E. Deci,et al.  Self-Determination Theory: Basic Psychological Needs in Motivation, Development, and Wellness , 2017 .

[20]  P. Batterham,et al.  Issues for eHealth in Psychiatry: Results of an Expert Survey , 2017, Journal of medical Internet research.

[21]  Glen A. Coppersmith,et al.  Understanding Depressive Symptoms and Psychosocial Stressors on Twitter: A Corpus-Based Study , 2017, Journal of medical Internet research.

[22]  S. Yarosh,et al.  “Happiness Inventors”: Informing Positive Computing Technologies Through Participatory Design With Children , 2017, Journal of medical Internet research.

[23]  Pattie Maes,et al.  Computing in Mental Health , 2016, CHI Extended Abstracts.

[24]  Daniel E. Rivera,et al.  Agile science: creating useful products for behavior change in the real world , 2016, Translational behavioral medicine.

[25]  John Torous,et al.  The digital placebo effect: mobile mental health meets clinical psychiatry. , 2016, The lancet. Psychiatry.

[26]  J. Baker,et al.  Why Psychiatry Needs Data Science and Data Science Needs Psychiatry: Connecting With Technology. , 2016, JAMA psychiatry.

[27]  K. Nuechterlein,et al.  The RAISE Connection Program for Early Psychosis: Secondary Outcomes and Mediators and Moderators of Improvement , 2015, The Journal of nervous and mental disease.

[28]  R. Calvo,et al.  Positive Computing: Technology for Wellbeing and Human Potential , 2014, Psychology Teaching Review.

[29]  G. Schofield,et al.  Measuring flourishing: The impact of operational definitions on the prevalence of high levels of wellbeing , 2014 .

[30]  Brent D. Fulton,et al.  The mental health workforce gap in low- and middle-income countries: a needs-based approach. , 2011, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.