Scientists created an app that might help fight depression

Scientists created an app that might help fight depression

/ 09:55 AM November 19, 2024

Harvard University scientists developed an app that breaks cycles of ruminative thinking, which is a key factor in depression.

Ruminative thinking is the repetitive cycle of negative thoughts that can worsen mood and amplify depressive symptoms. 

The app consists of five mini-games that engage the mind in positive, thought-disrupting activities. As a result, players had more substantial improvements to their depressive symptoms than those who hadn’t played it.

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How does the app fight depression?

This represents a user of the anti-depression app.
Free stock photo from Pexels

Harvard Professor Moshe Bar and colleagues tested the app on select participants and found significant, long-lasting mood improvements.

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The app had five mini-games that encouraged positive thoughts:

  1. Word-chains: Players arrange words in a chained manner according to associations.
  2. Zoom-out: It shows a large letter with small letters, and players must guess what the big letter is.
  3. Belong: The game shows an image, and players must provide two words depicting something related to the picture.
  4. Clouds: Players must choose the most creative interpretation for the meaning of a given abstract “cloud.”
  5. Speed-read: The game flashes a short text and then asks a related question.

READ: AI can diagnose depression better than doctors

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They observed the volunteers for eight weeks. Consequently, the participants exhibited noticeable mood and thought pattern changes after every weekly evaluation. 

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“The results indicate that across multiple clinical measurements… showed greater and faster improvement in depressive symptoms compared with their waitlist control counterparts,” the researchers wrote in their paper.

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READ: Social media causes poor mental health

They published their findings in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (JMIR). Moreover, its benefits extend beyond the study’s duration.

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Many continued to have reduced depressive symptoms four weeks after using the app. As a result, researchers believe it could become a powerful supplement to traditional therapies. 

It could make mental health treatments more accessible as it’s free to use. Such innovations come at a time when depression and mental health crises are rising worldwide. 

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TOPICS: app, Depression, mental health, technology
TAGS: app, Depression, mental health, technology

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