On June, 16, 2025 at Science Café #30, young experts and researchers worked together to refine the GEMMY app and explore how project outcomes can bring real value to young people.
Affirmations for the GEMMY App
Dr. Lonneke Fuhler (Remedial Educationalist at HU University of Applied Sciences Utrecht) presented the idea of integrating positive affirmations into the GEMMY wellbeing app, using a framework inspired by Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs. Young Experts reviewed a list of potential affirmations via Mentimeter, identifying which ones felt supportive, and which might be triggering or unhelpful.
Key insights from Young Experts:
How can youth benefit from the outcomes of our research?
Dr. Erika van Hell (Neuroscientist and project manager at Maastricht University) led a discussion on how Youth-GEMs outcomes can be most beneficial for young people. Current focus areas for exploitation are the Youth-GEMs App (passive and active monitoring for mental health research), the GEMMY App (tool for self-reflection and wellbeing) and the Youth-GEMs Knowledge Platform (an online hub with e-learnings, stories, and resources for different audiences).
When asked how apps and platforms can reach young people, Young Experts suggested:
Affirmations for the GEMMY App
Dr. Lonneke Fuhler (Remedial Educationalist at HU University of Applied Sciences Utrecht) presented the idea of integrating positive affirmations into the GEMMY wellbeing app, using a framework inspired by Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs. Young Experts reviewed a list of potential affirmations via Mentimeter, identifying which ones felt supportive, and which might be triggering or unhelpful.
Key insights from Young Experts:
- Affirmations should focus on who you are now, not who you “should” become.
- Some words, like “driving”, can be triggering.
- Phrasing matters: affirmations should empower, not pressure.
- Youth should have the option to create or edit their own affirmations.
How can youth benefit from the outcomes of our research?
Dr. Erika van Hell (Neuroscientist and project manager at Maastricht University) led a discussion on how Youth-GEMs outcomes can be most beneficial for young people. Current focus areas for exploitation are the Youth-GEMs App (passive and active monitoring for mental health research), the GEMMY App (tool for self-reflection and wellbeing) and the Youth-GEMs Knowledge Platform (an online hub with e-learnings, stories, and resources for different audiences).
When asked how apps and platforms can reach young people, Young Experts suggested:
- Go where young people are: classrooms, sports clubs, social media, YouTube.
- Use trusted voices: clinicians, psychologists, influencers, or even well-known ambassadors.
- Showcase uniqueness: small demo videos, screenshots, or user stories.
- Create incentives (e.g. streaks, gamification, recognition of input).
- Explore partnerships with schools and youth organisations.