Artificial intelligence chatbots are no longer a novelty for U.S. teenagers. They’re a habit. A new Pew Research Center survey of teens found that 64 percent have used an AI chatbot, with more than one in four using such tools daily, and nearly one in eight using them for emotional support or advice.
The tenth annual Science on the Hill event brings together scientific experts, technology leaders, and policy staff for a conversation about how Congress and federal agencies can support innovation while protecting the public—especially young people—who increasingly rely on digital tools for support.
Discussion at the event will address the following questions:
Where People Are Actually Going for Help: ChatGPT was the most popular bot among teens surveyed by a wide margin, even though those systems aren’t built or evaluated for mental‑health care. What policies can help the public understand the risks and choose safe, evidence‑based tools?
Congressional Options: What policy levers—programs, incentives, regulatory approaches, or public‑private partnerships—can help ensure that digital mental‑health tools are safe, transparent, and accessible?
Innovation With Guardrails: How can policymakers encourage responsible development across the private sector without slowing down promising advances that could expand access to care?
Hosted by Springer Nature, Scientific American, and Nature Portfolio, this event is designed to give congressional staff an engaging, science‑grounded look at one of today’s fastest‑moving policy challenge that directly affects youth, families, and communities in every district.