Science Café #33 : Exploring Narratives, AI, and the Role of Young Experts in Mental Health Research
- August 18, 2025
Exploring Narratives
Aleksa Milevic (MA Psychologist and RE&CBT Psychotherapist under supervision at the Clinic for neurology and psychiatry for children and youth in Belgrade) and Lisette van der Poel (Developmental Psychologist ate HU University of Applied Sciences in Utrecht) shared insights from narrative data collection within Work Packages 2 and 7. Young people from six countries contributed stories about living with mental health challenges, using narrative interviews and creative approaches like drawing rivers to represent their life experiences. The researchers highlighted the effectiveness of these methods in providing participants a comfortable way to express themselves, offering rich insights across cultural contexts. The group also acknowledged the contributions of young experts in shaping the methodology and training the interviewers.
AI and social media
The group also discussed the role of AI and social media in mental health. While social media can offer support, it may also foster competitiveness and a blurred boundary between virtual and real life. The potential benefits and limitations of AI chatbots were explored, including concerns about overly positive responses in therapeutic contexts and the possibility of AI providing missing positive reinforcement, with caution about its limitations.
Qualitative research methods
The Café explored qualitative research methods, explaining how qualitative data is analyzed by identifying key themes and deeper meanings across narratives, without generalizing to all participants. The value of this approach in understanding what makes experiences helpful or traumatic was emphasized, and future events were suggested to explore qualitative research further.
The role of young experts in research
Bart Rutten, coordinator of the Youth-GEMs project, provided an overview of the project, highlighting its 5-year EU-funded mission to improve mental health care for young people through predictive tools, self-help strategies, and enhanced interactions with healthcare professionals. Bart emphasized the vital role of young experts in co-creating research, contributing to Science Cafés, and supporting app development. Participants reflected on feeling seen and heard and discussed ways to strengthen their roles as co-researchers and co-designers throughout the project. The session concluded with reflections on the project’s structure, future directions, and collaboration across work packages.