# Real-World Use of a Mental Health AI Companion: Multiple Methods Study

**Authors:** Christine Callahan, Leah Tanner, Chelsea Coe, Michelle Davis, Jenna Glover, Ellis Bernstein, Katherine Scranton, Kenli Urruty, Matthew Chester, Sarah Kunkle

PMC · DOI: 10.2196/86904 · JMIR Formative Research · 2026-02-13

## TL;DR

This study explores how people use and perceive a mental health AI tool called Ebb, finding it helpful for in-the-moment support and resource navigation.

## Contribution

The paper introduces a purpose-built mental health AI companion with clinical safety mechanisms and evaluates its real-world use and user perceptions.

## Key findings

- Ebb users showed higher retention and positive ratings with the improved CAI tool 2.0 compared to the initial version.
- Users viewed the AI as a supplement to human mental health care, emphasizing the need for safety and ethical transparency.
- Diary study participants used the tool during stress or anxiety and in daily routines like morning or night.

## Abstract

The rapid acceleration of large language models (LLMs) creates opportunities to expand the accessibility of mental health support; however, general artificial intelligence (AI) tools lack safety guardrails, evidence-based practices, and medical regulation compliance, which may result in misinformation and failing to escalate care in crises. In contrast, Ebb, Headspace’s conversational AI tool (CAI tool), was purpose-built by clinical psychologists and research experts using motivational interviewing techniques for subclinical guidance, incorporating clinically backed safety mechanisms.

This study aimed to (1) understand Headspace members’ sentiment toward AI and expectations for a mental health CAI tool, (2) evaluate real-world use of Headspace’s CAI tool, and (3) understand how members perceive a CAI tool fitting into their mental health journey.

This was a multiple method study using three data sources including Headspace members: (1) cross-sectional survey (n=482) assessing demographics, AI use, and the Artificial Intelligence Attitude Scale-4 (AIAS-4); (2) real-world engagement descriptive analysis (n=393,969) assessing session and message counts, retention, and conversation themes; and (3) diary study (n=15) exploring the CAI tool’s role within members’ mental health journey. App engagement was compared between CAI tool 1.0 and CAI tool 2.0, where CAI tool 2.0 featured enhanced LLM conversational prompts, comprehensive memory, woven content recommendations, and more robust safety detection.

While the majority of survey respondents used and would continue to use general AI tools, overall attitudes toward AI remained neutral (AIAS-4 mean 5.7, SD 2.2, range 1-10). Survey results suggest that members viewed the CAI tool as a guide to navigate to mental health resources and Headspace content and provide in-the-moment support. Members emphasized the need for data safety and ethics transparency, clinical guidelines structure, and for the CAI tool to be a resource in addition to human-delivered mental health care, not a replacement. Real-world CAI tool use showed strong engagement across 393,969 Headspace members. The product evolution to CAI tool 2.0 led to increased retention (77,894/153,249, 50.8% completed 2 sessions within 7 days vs 68,701/240,720, 28.5% for CAI tool 1.0) and higher positive conversation ratings (37,819/40,449, 93.5% vs 94,308/104,323, 90.4%). Retained CAI tool 2.0 users showed greater retention (6.1 sessions per user) compared to all CAI tool 2.0 users (2.9 sessions per user) and CAI tool 1.0 (2.4 sessions per user). Diary study results suggest that members imagined using the CAI tool when feeling stress or anxiety and during morning routines, commutes, or while winding down at night.

Results emphasize the necessity of research-backed, purpose-built mental health AI products with minimum viable safeguards, including (1) transparent labeling of intended use, benefits, and limitations; (2) safety by design principles to monitor for overuse, detect risk, and flag needs for escalation; and (3) child and adolescent safeguards.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** anxiety (MESH:D001007)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12949398/full.md

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12949398/full.md

## References

20 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12949398/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12949398