The Youth-GEMs project is developing two distinct mobile apps: Gemmy and The Youth-GEMs App.
Both are co-created with young people, grounded in evidence, and essential to the Youth-GEMs initiative- but they serve different purposes and audiences.
In this article, we outline the key differences between the two.
Gemmy: a self-assessment & wellbeing app
The Gemmy app is designed to be a personalised tool for self-awareness, self-assessment, and emotional well-being, tailored to the needs of youth aged 14-20 years old.
The app will work as a “build-your-own toolkit”. Think of Gemmy as a personal mental well-being companion: fun, supportive, and customisable!
The app is being co-developed by social scientists, our partner organisation Ab.Acus, and young people themselves.Young Experts from our partner Euro Youth Mental Health have been involved from day 1 choosing features, shaping visuals, and reviewing content alongside researchers and developers. In the future they will be testing prototypes as well.
Gemmy will be released as a public well-being tool after development and testing are completed.
Key Features
Grounding tools like calming sounds, guided breathing, and soothing visuals.
Emotion wheel to explore and name feelings.
Positive affirmations.
Goal setting and progress tracking.
Learning modules (for example about stress).
Calm button for easy access to preferred grounding resources
The Youth-GEMs App: a research & monitoring Tool
This app collects data in our multi-country clinical study aimed at improving early detection, prediction, and monitoring of youth mental health trajectories using AI. Think of The Youth-GEMs App as a secure research tool helping scientists and clinicians learn more about mental health patterns in young people.
Our partner organisation Ab.Acus has developed this app together with several stakeholders, including clinicians, researchers and Young Experts. They contributed in defining the interesting data fields (e.g. mobility, physical activity, sleep), data interpretation and visualisation.
The Youth-GEMs app is currently available to participants enrolled in the Youth-GEMs clinical study. The data collected though the app will be used to feed an AI model to provide personalised predictions to the clinicians. The model will be reviewed by clinicians for accuracy, fairness, and transparency.
Key Features
Active tracking: short daily activities, mood check-ins, My Life Tracker wellbeing questionnaire. These activities involve voice recordings and text inputs to be analysed to extract new indicators of the user’s mental health status.
Passive tracking: make use of the smartphone sensors to monitor user lifestyle in terms of sleep, mobility, activity, and phone usage. The acquisition is designed to be continuous in time and relevant features are computed from the collected data on a daily basis.
Disclaimer: Both Gemmy and The Youth-GEMs app are not a medical device, and not for diagnosis or treatment.