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A Motivational Interviewing Chatbot With Generative Reflections for Increasing Readiness to Quit Smoking: Iterative Development Study

Authors :
Andrew Brown
Ash Tanuj Kumar
Osnat Melamed
Imtihan Ahmed
Yu Hao Wang
Arnaud Deza
Marc Morcos
Leon Zhu
Marta Maslej
Nadia Minian
Vidya Sujaya
Jodi Wolff
Olivia Doggett
Mathew Iantorno
Matt Ratto
Peter Selby
Jonathan Rose
Source :
JMIR Mental Health, Vol 10, p e49132 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
JMIR Publications, 2023.

Abstract

BackgroundThe motivational interviewing (MI) approach has been shown to help move ambivalent smokers toward the decision to quit smoking. There have been several attempts to broaden access to MI through text-based chatbots. These typically use scripted responses to client statements, but such nonspecific responses have been shown to reduce effectiveness. Recent advances in natural language processing provide a new way to create responses that are specific to a client’s statements, using a generative language model. ObjectiveThis study aimed to design, evolve, and measure the effectiveness of a chatbot system that can guide ambivalent people who smoke toward the decision to quit smoking with MI-style generative reflections. MethodsOver time, 4 different MI chatbot versions were evolved, and each version was tested with a separate group of ambivalent smokers. A total of 349 smokers were recruited through a web-based recruitment platform. The first chatbot version only asked questions without reflections on the answers. The second version asked the questions and provided reflections with an initial version of the reflection generator. The third version used an improved reflection generator, and the fourth version added extended interaction on some of the questions. Participants’ readiness to quit was measured before the conversation and 1 week later using an 11-point scale that measured 3 attributes related to smoking cessation: readiness, confidence, and importance. The number of quit attempts made in the week before the conversation and the week after was surveyed; in addition, participants rated the perceived empathy of the chatbot. The main body of the conversation consists of 5 scripted questions, responses from participants, and (for 3 of the 4 versions) generated reflections. A pretrained transformer-based neural network was fine-tuned on examples of high-quality reflections to generate MI reflections. ResultsThe increase in average confidence using the nongenerative version was 1.0 (SD 2.0; P=.001), whereas for the 3 generative versions, the increases ranged from 1.2 to 1.3 (SD 2.0-2.3; P

Subjects

Subjects :
Psychology
BF1-990

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23687959
Volume :
10
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
JMIR Mental Health
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.0e2e820c0c594e77895c6093eebd3114
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2196/49132