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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Mental Health

Date Submitted: Oct 9, 2024
Date Accepted: Feb 6, 2025

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Impact of Conversational and Animation Features of a Mental Health App Virtual Agent on Depressive Symptoms and User Experience Among College Students: Randomized Controlled Trial

Six S, Schlesener E, Hill V, Babu S, Byrne K

Impact of Conversational and Animation Features of a Mental Health App Virtual Agent on Depressive Symptoms and User Experience Among College Students: Randomized Controlled Trial

JMIR Ment Health 2025;12:e67381

DOI: 10.2196/67381

PMID: 40215483

PMCID: 12007843

Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.

Evaluating the Impact of Conversational and Animation Virtual Agent Features in a Mental Health App on Depressive Symptoms and User Experience in College Students: A Randomized Controlled Trial

  • Stephanie Six; 
  • Elizabeth Schlesener; 
  • Victoria Hill; 
  • Sabarish Babu; 
  • Kaileigh Byrne

ABSTRACT

Background:

Numerous mental health applications (MHealth apps) purport to alleviate depressive symptoms. Strong evidence suggests that brief cognitive behavioral therapy (bCBT)-based MHealth apps can decrease depressive symptoms, yet there is limited research elucidating the specific features that may augment its therapeutic benefits. One potential design feature that may influence effectiveness and user experience is the inclusion of virtual agents that can mimic realistic, human face-to-face interactions.

Objective:

The goal of the current experiment was to determine the effect of conversation and animation virtual agent features within a bCBT-based MHealth app on depressive symptoms and user experience in college students with and without depressive symptoms.

Methods:

College students (N=209) completed a two-week intervention in which they engaged with a bCBT-based MHealth app with a customizable therapeutic virtual agent that varied in conversational and animation features. A 2 (Time: Baseline vs. Two-Week Follow-Up) x 2 (Conversational vs. Non-Conversational Agent) x 2 (Animated vs. Non-Animated Agent) randomized controlled trial was utilized to assess mental health symptoms (PHQ-8, PSS-10, and RRS questionnaires) and user experience (MAUQ questionnaire) in college students with and without current depressive symptoms. MHealth app usability and qualitative questions regarding users’ perceptions of their therapeutic virtual agent interactions and customization process were assessed at follow-up.

Results:

Mixed ANOVA results demonstrated a significant decrease in symptoms of depression (P = .002; M = 5.50±4.86 at follow-up vs. M = 6.35±4.71 at baseline), stress (P = .005; M = 15.91±7.67 at follow-up vs. M = 17.02±6.81 at baseline), and rumination (P = .028; M = 40.42±12.96 at follow-up vs. M = 41.92±13.61 at baseline); however, no significant effect of conversation or animation was observed. Findings also indicate a significant increase in user experience in animated conditions. This significant increase in animated conditions is also reflected in the user’s ease of use and satisfaction (F(1, 201) = 102.60, P < .001), system information arrangement (F(1, 201) = 123.12, P < .001), and usefulness of the application (F(1, 201) = 3667.62, P < .001).

Conclusions:

The current experiment provides support for bCBT-based MHealth apps featuring customizable, humanlike therapeutic virtual agents and their ability to significantly reduce negative symptomology over a brief timeframe. The app intervention reduced mental health symptoms, regardless of whether the agent included animation or conversational features, but animation features enhanced user experience. These effects were observed in both users with and without depressive symptoms.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Six S, Schlesener E, Hill V, Babu S, Byrne K

Impact of Conversational and Animation Features of a Mental Health App Virtual Agent on Depressive Symptoms and User Experience Among College Students: Randomized Controlled Trial

JMIR Ment Health 2025;12:e67381

DOI: 10.2196/67381

PMID: 40215483

PMCID: 12007843

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