Mental Health in an Age of Artificial Intelligence

Tue Apr 07 2026 at 09:00 am to 12:00 pm UTC-05:00

Cunningham Center at MidAmerica Nazarene University | Olathe

MidAmerica Nazarene University's School of Counseling
Publisher/HostMidAmerica Nazarene University's School of Counseling
Mental Health in an Age of Artificial Intelligence
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How AI and screen-mediated environments may be quietly reshaping attention, connection, and expectation.
About this Event

Most conversations about AI tend to move very quickly.

They become technical. Opinionated. Predictive.
Often confident. Sometimes alarmed.

Today, we want to slow that down.

Rather than debating what AI will become, we want to explore something far more immediate and personal — what it already feels like to live alongside it.

Not as a technology question, but as a human one.

Because woven into these daily interactions are experiences deeply tied to mental health — attention, effort, frustration, connection, confidence, even our sense of competence and self-trust.

For most of us, AI is no longer an abstract idea or distant technology.

It appears in small, almost forgettable moments.
While writing an email.
While solving a problem.
While searching for clarity.
While trying to save time.

It has quietly entered the texture of ordinary life.

And you may recognize some of these experiences.


For those of you who are students, navigating constant demands on attention and performance:

• When does using AI feel genuinely supportive to your learning…
and when does it feel like you may be stepping away from the very thinking that builds confidence in your chosen field?


For those of you who are educators, observing shifts in effort, persistence, and mental engagement:

• Are you noticing changes in how students tolerate difficulty, ambiguity, or sustained problem solving?

• How do we distinguish between productive assistance and patterns that may weaken intellectual endurance?

• What might it look like to integrate AI in ways that genuinely support learning while still preserving struggle, reasoning, free thought, and cognitive growth?


For those of you who are parents or caregivers, watching development unfold in a screen/ AI-saturated world:

• Do minor frustrations or ordinary challenges sometimes produce quicker overwhelm or disengagement than you would expect?

• Are patience, frustration tolerance, or persistence appearing to shift in subtle ways? Are they affecting your family's health as a whole?


For those of you navigating professional roles, where expectations, efficiency, and output are constantly recalibrated:

• Have tools designed to reduce effort ever created new forms of pressure, comparison, or the sense of needing to keep pace? And where have they affected your sense of safety and stability?

• When does AI feel like cognitive relief…
and when does it feel like cognitive displacement?


For those of you who are partners or spouses, witnessing these shifts in shared daily life:

• Have you observed changes in attention, patience, presence, or stress that seem connected to digital or AI-mediated environments?

• Do you ever sense that decision making, problem solving, or even casual questions now include an unseen participant...one that maybe rhymes with BlabTCP?


For those of you working in helping or clinical professions, where human judgment and presence remain central:

• What aspects of discernment, empathy, and relational attunement resist automation?

• Where might reliance on AI subtly alter how we experience expertise or authority?


And for all of us, simply as humans adapting to rapidly changing cognitive environments:

• Where has AI felt meaningfully helpful...not just faster...but kept your intellectual integrity intact?

• When does assistance feel beneficial…
and when might the struggle itself still serve growth, resilience, or self-trust?


In practice, these decisions are rarely this explicit.

They happen quietly, dozens of times a day, shaping how we engage effort, uncertainty, and even our own minds.

These are the kinds of tensions we want to sit with today.

Not to argue.
Not to moralize.
But to observe, to reflect, and to think together about how AI and screen-mediated environments may be quietly reshaping attention, connection, and expectation.

Because the psychological effects of AI do not arrive dramatically.

They accumulate quietly...inside attention, behavior, relationships, and standards of performance.

And most of the time, we only notice them once we pause long enough to look.

All are welcome. We kindly request that you RSVP to reserve your seat so we can plan refreshments and seating. Thank you!


Agenda

🕑: 09:00 AM - 10:00 AM
Becoming in an AI World (Individual / Development)
🕑: 10:00 AM - 11:00 AM
The Social Experience (Community / Relationships)
🕑: 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM
Performance and Pressure (Education / Profession)
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Event Venue & Nearby Stays

Cunningham Center at MidAmerica Nazarene University, 2041 East Pioneer Boulevard, Olathe, United States

Tickets

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