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AI Tools for Therapy

Dr Kirk Honda interviews Gregg Spiridellis (founder of JibJab, etc.) about his AI tools for therapists and clients.

00:00 Introducing Gregg Spiridellis

04:19 What inspired Moments?

14:33 How private is my data?

25:40 What feedback have they received?

26:33 What is Moments for Therapists?  

43:47 Could this app be useful?

52:25 Why are prompts so important?

58:28 What do you lose with AI? 


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October 27, 2025

The Psychology In Seattle Podcast ®

Trigger Warning: This episode may include topics such as assault, trauma, and discrimination. If necessary, listeners are encouraged to refrain from listening and care for their safety and well-being.

Disclaimer: The content provided is for educational, informational, and entertainment purposes only. Nothing here constitutes personal or professional consultation, therapy, diagnosis, or creates a counselor-client relationship. Topics discussed may generate differing points of view. If you participate (by being a guest, submitting a question, or commenting) you must do so with the knowledge that we cannot control reactions or responses from others, which may not agree with you or feel unfair. Your participation on this site is at your own risk, accepting full responsibility for any liability or harm that may result. Anything you write here may be used for discussion or endorsement of the podcast. Opinions and views expressed by the host and guest hosts are personal views. Although, we take precautions and fact check, they should not be considered facts and the opinions may change. Opinions posted by participants (such as comments) are not those of the hosts. Readers should not rely on any information found here and should perform due diligence before taking any action. For a more extensive description of factors for you to consider, please see www.psychologyinseattle.com

AI Tools for Therapy

Comments

During my internship at a CMH site they heavily pushed this device called Elios which was a device that listens to the session, summarizes what was said, and actually had therapeutic insight. It caught on to interventions like “therapist used existential therapy to highlight etc etc” It was pretty impressive on how much it caught on to the accuracy of interventions. To me, it seemed like the incentive to implement this tool was to increase insurance-compliant documentation. Lots more to say! But yes, AI is being implemented in the clinical settings.

Rachel Wright

Thanks for this podcast and asking challenging questions! Even though your guest seems to have integrity is probably genuine, what happens later - when the company is sold down the line - he won't always be there to hold the line. So that would personally give me pause. I do respect and believe him but like you said we all have been burned so much and the future seems uncertain with our country's administration.

Rachael Rutkowski

I am once again baffled at how simple and uningenuous most of the AI wrapper apps are. As in the discussed client app: user writes/dictates notes, ChatGPT summarizes them. This doesn't seem to be specifically designed for enhancing therapy. Odd, but such apps obviously sell (even though people could just use ChatGPT or a different model directly). Thanks, though, Kirk, for diving into these topics.

Tonja


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