Expert Council on Well-Being and AI

OpenAI Blog News

Summary

OpenAI has established an Expert Council on Well-Being and AI comprising leading researchers and experts in psychology, psychiatry, and human-computer interaction to guide development of safer and more beneficial AI experiences. The council will advise on healthy AI interactions across age groups, with particular focus on teen users and mental health considerations.

OpenAI’s new Expert Council on Well-Being and AI brings together leading psychologists, clinicians, and researchers to guide how ChatGPT supports emotional health, especially for teens. Learn how their insights are shaping safer, more caring AI experiences.
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# Expert Council on Well-Being and AI Source: [https://openai.com/index/expert-council-on-well-being-and-ai/](https://openai.com/index/expert-council-on-well-being-and-ai/) OpenAIIntroducing the members of the Expert Council on Well\-Being and AI and how we’ll work together\. We’ve assembled the**Expert Council on Well\-Being and AI**to help guide our ongoing work to[build more helpful ChatGPT and Sora experiences for everyone](https://openai.com/index/building-more-helpful-chatgpt-experiences-for-everyone/)\. The council brings together leading researchers and experts with decades of experience studying how technology affects our emotions, motivation, and mental health\. Their role is to advise us, pose questions and help define what healthy interactions with AI should look like for all ages\. Earlier this year, we began consulting many of these experts informally, such as when we were developing[parental controls⁠\(opens in a new window\)](https://chatgpt.com/parent-resources?openaicom_referred=true)and the notification language for parents when a teen may be in distress\. As we formalized the new council, we broadened our search to include additional experts in psychology, psychiatry, and human\-computer interaction, bringing in new perspectives on how people relate to and are affected by technology\. Because teens use ChatGPT differently than adults, we’ve also included several council members with backgrounds in understanding how to build technology that supports healthy youth development\. We remain responsible for the decisions we make, but we’ll continue learning from this council, the Global Physician Network, policymakers, and more, as we build advanced AI systems in ways that support people’s well\-being\. We’re grateful to this initial group for their deep expertise and shared commitment to making AI supportive and safe\. - **David Bickham, Ph\.D\.**—Research Director at the Digital Wellness Lab at Boston Children’s Hospital and Assistant Professor at Harvard Medical School\. His work looks at how young people’s social media use affects their mental health and development\. - **Mathilde Cerioli, Ph\.D\.**—Chief Scientific Officer at everyone\.AI, a nonprofit helping people understand the opportunities and risks of AI for children\. With a Ph\.D\. in Cognitive Neuroscience and a Master’s Degree in Psychology, her research focuses on how AI intersects with child cognitive and emotional development\. - **Munmun De Choudhury, Ph\.D\.**—J\. Z\. Liang Professor of Interactive Computing at Georgia Tech\. She harnesses computational approaches to better understand the role of online technologies in shaping and improving mental health\. - **Tracy Dennis\-Tiwary, Ph\.D\.**—Professor of Psychology at Hunter College and co\-founder and CSO at Arcade Therapeutics\. She creates digital games for mental health and explores interactions between technology and emotional wellbeing\. - **David Mohr, Ph\.D\.**—Professor at Northwestern University and Director of the Center for Behavioral Intervention Technologies\. He studies how technology can help prevent and treat common mental health conditions such as depression and anxiety\. - **Robert K\. Ross, M\.D\.**—A national leader and expert in health philanthropy, public health, and community\-based health initiatives\. He began his career as a pediatrician and is formerly the president and CEO of The California Endowment\. We kicked off this council last week with an in\-person session to deep dive into OpenAI’s current work in these areas and to have council members meet the teams they will be working with and advising\. Our work with the council will include regular check\-ins on our approach, and recurring meetings to explore topics like how AI should behave in complex or sensitive situations and what kinds of guardrails can best support people using ChatGPT\. As an example, for the rollout of[parental controls](https://openai.com/index/introducing-parental-controls/), we consulted individual members to help us prioritize which controls to build first and how best to notify parents if their teen appears to be in distress\. Their feedback shaped the tone of the messages we use, so they feel caring and respectful to both teens and the family members\. The council will also help us think about how ChatGPT can have a positive impact on people’s lives and contribute to their well\-being\. Some of our initial discussions have focused around what constitutes well\-being and the ways ChatGPT might empower people as they navigate all aspects of their life\. We’ll keep listening, learning, and sharing what comes out of this work\. Alongside the Expert Council on Well\-Being and AI advising on our broader approach to well\-being, we’re also working with a multidisciplinary subset of mental health clinicians and researchers within the[**Global Physician Network**](https://openai.com/index/building-more-helpful-chatgpt-experiences-for-everyone/)to shape our model behavior and policies, and to test how ChatGPT responds in real\-world situations\. This work spans psychiatry, psychology, pediatrics, and crisis intervention, helping ensure our systems are grounded in clinical understanding and best practices\.

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