On July, 22, 2025 the Science Café opened with a creative mood check-in: “If your mood was the weather today, what would it be?” This playful start encouraged openness and connection. The group also reflected on their working agreement, making sure sensitivity and inclusivity remain central to our conversations.
Affirmations in the GEMMY App
Together we reviewed some of the wellbeing affirmations in the GEMMY app. The discussion showed how small wording changes can make affirmations more supportive. For instance: “I appreciate where I am, still I strive for more” feels positive; whereas “I am trying to get where I want to be” was flagged as potentially triggering.
Research Update on the Clinical Study
Emily Guerra (researcher at IiSGM – Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria Gregorio Marañón) presented the latest from the clinical study in Work Package 7, which explores youth mental health using a transdiagnostic approach. About 200 participants (aged 12–24) are already enrolled in the study that includes clinical interviews, neuropsychological tasks, self-report questionnaires, and app-based tracking (sleep, mobility, journaling, biweekly check-ins). The group explored how to boost engagement with the Youth-GEMs app that is used in this clinical study.
What Young Experts suggested:
- Friendlier notifications (e.g. “Reopen the app to keep things going!”).
- Personal touches, like the app mascot saying “Hi!”.
- Letting users set notification preferences.
- Offering alternatives for those who disable notifications, such as email reminders.
- Gamification and motivational nudges (“Your input is valued!”).
- Graphical feedback so participants can see their own progress.
The session ended with a shared reflection: how do we balance sensitivity with the importance of continuous data collection? The group agreed the answer lies in ongoing co-creation and testing with young people.
Youth voices are shaping Youth-GEMs at every step! Science Café #32 showed once again that research becomes stronger, and more meaningful, when young people are actively involved.