Cargando…

Design and Formative Evaluation of a Virtual Voice-Based Coach for Problem-solving Treatment: Observational Study

BACKGROUND: Artificial intelligence has provided new opportunities for human interactions with technology for the practice of medicine. Among the recent artificial intelligence innovations, personal voice assistants have been broadly adopted. This highlights their potential for health care–related a...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kannampallil, Thomas, Ronneberg, Corina R, Wittels, Nancy E, Kumar, Vikas, Lv, Nan, Smyth, Joshua M, Gerber, Ben S, Kringle, Emily A, Johnson, Jillian A, Yu, Philip, Steinman, Lesley E, Ajilore, Olu A, Ma, Jun
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9419044/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35969431
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/38092
_version_ 1784777087829147648
author Kannampallil, Thomas
Ronneberg, Corina R
Wittels, Nancy E
Kumar, Vikas
Lv, Nan
Smyth, Joshua M
Gerber, Ben S
Kringle, Emily A
Johnson, Jillian A
Yu, Philip
Steinman, Lesley E
Ajilore, Olu A
Ma, Jun
author_facet Kannampallil, Thomas
Ronneberg, Corina R
Wittels, Nancy E
Kumar, Vikas
Lv, Nan
Smyth, Joshua M
Gerber, Ben S
Kringle, Emily A
Johnson, Jillian A
Yu, Philip
Steinman, Lesley E
Ajilore, Olu A
Ma, Jun
author_sort Kannampallil, Thomas
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Artificial intelligence has provided new opportunities for human interactions with technology for the practice of medicine. Among the recent artificial intelligence innovations, personal voice assistants have been broadly adopted. This highlights their potential for health care–related applications such as behavioral counseling to promote healthy lifestyle habits and emotional well-being. However, the use of voice-based applications for behavioral therapy has not been previously evaluated. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to conduct a formative user evaluation of Lumen, a virtual voice-based coach developed as an Alexa skill that delivers evidence-based, problem-solving treatment for patients with mild to moderate depression and/or anxiety. METHODS: A total of 26 participants completed 2 therapy sessions—an introductory (session 1) and a problem-solving (session 2)—with Lumen. Following each session with Lumen, participants completed user experience, task-related workload, and work alliance surveys. They also participated in semistructured interviews addressing the benefits, challenges and barriers to Lumen use, and design recommendations. We evaluated the differences in user experience, task load, and work alliance between sessions using 2-tailed paired t tests. Interview transcripts were coded using an inductive thematic analysis to characterize the participants’ perspectives regarding Lumen use. RESULTS: Participants found Lumen to provide high pragmatic usability and favorable user experience, with marginal task load during interactions for both Lumen sessions. However, participants experienced a higher temporal workload during the problem-solving session, suggesting a feeling of being rushed during their communicative interactions. On the basis of the qualitative analysis, the following themes were identified: Lumen’s on-demand accessibility and the delivery of a complex problem-solving treatment task with a simplistic structure for achieving therapy goals; themes related to Lumen improvements included streamlining and improved personalization of conversations, slower pacing of conversations, and providing additional context during therapy sessions. CONCLUSIONS: On the basis of an in-depth formative evaluation, we found that Lumen supported the ability to conduct cognitively plausible interactions for the delivery of behavioral therapy. Several design suggestions identified from the study including reducing temporal and cognitive load during conversational interactions, developing more natural conversations, and expanding privacy and security features were incorporated in the revised version of Lumen. Although further research is needed, the promising findings from this study highlight the potential for using Lumen to deliver personalized and accessible mental health care, filling a gap in traditional mental health services.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9419044
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher JMIR Publications
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-94190442022-08-28 Design and Formative Evaluation of a Virtual Voice-Based Coach for Problem-solving Treatment: Observational Study Kannampallil, Thomas Ronneberg, Corina R Wittels, Nancy E Kumar, Vikas Lv, Nan Smyth, Joshua M Gerber, Ben S Kringle, Emily A Johnson, Jillian A Yu, Philip Steinman, Lesley E Ajilore, Olu A Ma, Jun JMIR Form Res Original Paper BACKGROUND: Artificial intelligence has provided new opportunities for human interactions with technology for the practice of medicine. Among the recent artificial intelligence innovations, personal voice assistants have been broadly adopted. This highlights their potential for health care–related applications such as behavioral counseling to promote healthy lifestyle habits and emotional well-being. However, the use of voice-based applications for behavioral therapy has not been previously evaluated. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to conduct a formative user evaluation of Lumen, a virtual voice-based coach developed as an Alexa skill that delivers evidence-based, problem-solving treatment for patients with mild to moderate depression and/or anxiety. METHODS: A total of 26 participants completed 2 therapy sessions—an introductory (session 1) and a problem-solving (session 2)—with Lumen. Following each session with Lumen, participants completed user experience, task-related workload, and work alliance surveys. They also participated in semistructured interviews addressing the benefits, challenges and barriers to Lumen use, and design recommendations. We evaluated the differences in user experience, task load, and work alliance between sessions using 2-tailed paired t tests. Interview transcripts were coded using an inductive thematic analysis to characterize the participants’ perspectives regarding Lumen use. RESULTS: Participants found Lumen to provide high pragmatic usability and favorable user experience, with marginal task load during interactions for both Lumen sessions. However, participants experienced a higher temporal workload during the problem-solving session, suggesting a feeling of being rushed during their communicative interactions. On the basis of the qualitative analysis, the following themes were identified: Lumen’s on-demand accessibility and the delivery of a complex problem-solving treatment task with a simplistic structure for achieving therapy goals; themes related to Lumen improvements included streamlining and improved personalization of conversations, slower pacing of conversations, and providing additional context during therapy sessions. CONCLUSIONS: On the basis of an in-depth formative evaluation, we found that Lumen supported the ability to conduct cognitively plausible interactions for the delivery of behavioral therapy. Several design suggestions identified from the study including reducing temporal and cognitive load during conversational interactions, developing more natural conversations, and expanding privacy and security features were incorporated in the revised version of Lumen. Although further research is needed, the promising findings from this study highlight the potential for using Lumen to deliver personalized and accessible mental health care, filling a gap in traditional mental health services. JMIR Publications 2022-08-12 /pmc/articles/PMC9419044/ /pubmed/35969431 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/38092 Text en ©Thomas Kannampallil, Corina R Ronneberg, Nancy E Wittels, Vikas Kumar, Nan Lv, Joshua M Smyth, Ben S Gerber, Emily A Kringle, Jillian A Johnson, Philip Yu, Lesley E Steinman, Olu A Ajilore, Jun Ma. Originally published in JMIR Formative Research (https://formative.jmir.org), 12.08.2022. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Formative Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://formative.jmir.org, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Kannampallil, Thomas
Ronneberg, Corina R
Wittels, Nancy E
Kumar, Vikas
Lv, Nan
Smyth, Joshua M
Gerber, Ben S
Kringle, Emily A
Johnson, Jillian A
Yu, Philip
Steinman, Lesley E
Ajilore, Olu A
Ma, Jun
Design and Formative Evaluation of a Virtual Voice-Based Coach for Problem-solving Treatment: Observational Study
title Design and Formative Evaluation of a Virtual Voice-Based Coach for Problem-solving Treatment: Observational Study
title_full Design and Formative Evaluation of a Virtual Voice-Based Coach for Problem-solving Treatment: Observational Study
title_fullStr Design and Formative Evaluation of a Virtual Voice-Based Coach for Problem-solving Treatment: Observational Study
title_full_unstemmed Design and Formative Evaluation of a Virtual Voice-Based Coach for Problem-solving Treatment: Observational Study
title_short Design and Formative Evaluation of a Virtual Voice-Based Coach for Problem-solving Treatment: Observational Study
title_sort design and formative evaluation of a virtual voice-based coach for problem-solving treatment: observational study
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9419044/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35969431
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/38092
work_keys_str_mv AT kannampallilthomas designandformativeevaluationofavirtualvoicebasedcoachforproblemsolvingtreatmentobservationalstudy
AT ronnebergcorinar designandformativeevaluationofavirtualvoicebasedcoachforproblemsolvingtreatmentobservationalstudy
AT wittelsnancye designandformativeevaluationofavirtualvoicebasedcoachforproblemsolvingtreatmentobservationalstudy
AT kumarvikas designandformativeevaluationofavirtualvoicebasedcoachforproblemsolvingtreatmentobservationalstudy
AT lvnan designandformativeevaluationofavirtualvoicebasedcoachforproblemsolvingtreatmentobservationalstudy
AT smythjoshuam designandformativeevaluationofavirtualvoicebasedcoachforproblemsolvingtreatmentobservationalstudy
AT gerberbens designandformativeevaluationofavirtualvoicebasedcoachforproblemsolvingtreatmentobservationalstudy
AT kringleemilya designandformativeevaluationofavirtualvoicebasedcoachforproblemsolvingtreatmentobservationalstudy
AT johnsonjilliana designandformativeevaluationofavirtualvoicebasedcoachforproblemsolvingtreatmentobservationalstudy
AT yuphilip designandformativeevaluationofavirtualvoicebasedcoachforproblemsolvingtreatmentobservationalstudy
AT steinmanlesleye designandformativeevaluationofavirtualvoicebasedcoachforproblemsolvingtreatmentobservationalstudy
AT ajiloreolua designandformativeevaluationofavirtualvoicebasedcoachforproblemsolvingtreatmentobservationalstudy
AT majun designandformativeevaluationofavirtualvoicebasedcoachforproblemsolvingtreatmentobservationalstudy