HONG KONG SAR -
Media OutReach Newswire
- 24 April 2026 - There is a particular kind of exhaustion that comes
not from the stress itself, but from carrying it in silence — unsure
whether it is serious enough to mention, or whether anyone would truly
understand.
A newly completed Hong Kong study suggests there may finally be a way to
bridge that gap. The AIM Greater China Psychology Research Group has
completed a Hong Kong-based study conducted in the 2025–2026 academic
year, comparing the effectiveness of human hypnotherapists against AI in
delivering hypnotic experience-based stress relief experiences. The
findings were striking: a significant proportion of participants felt
that both approaches yielded virtually equivalent levels of relaxation —
and more than 60% reported preferring their AI session after the fact.
Over 400 Applicants: A Reflection of a Generation in Need of Being Heard
The research team recruited participants experiencing family-related
stress via Facebook. Within a short period of the post going live, over
400 individuals voluntarily applied — a figure that speaks not only to
the pervasiveness of stress in modern life, but also to a growing
willingness among the public to prioritise their own emotional wellbeing
and actively seek self-care solutions.
From the applicant pool, 48 participants were randomly selected to take
part. Each participant underwent two separate hypnotic experience stress
relief audio sessions, each lasting approximately one hour — one
recorded by a human hypnotherapist, and one fully generated by AI,
including both the script and voice. Participants then compared their
personal experiences of both sessions.
What Humans Can Do, AI Can Do Too
In the most critical area of comparison — stress relief effectiveness —
the largest single group of participants (41.7%) rated the AI and human
sessions as equally effective. On a scoring basis, the AI hypnotic
experience averaged approximately 2.92 points, compared to 2.58 points
for the human session — with AI coming out marginally ahead.
The study further found that nearly 90% of participants indicated they
would enjoy a session if it genuinely helped them feel relaxed. In other
words, what people truly care about is
whether it works — not
whether the voice behind it belongs to a human or a machine. On this front, AI has passed the test.
Over 60% More Willing to Share Their Feelings with AI
The results around personal preference were perhaps the most
eye-opening. When asked which session they enjoyed more, 62.5% of
participants chose the AI experience — and among women, that number
climbed even higher, to 68.4%.
So what made AI the preferred choice' Researchers believe it comes down
to one simple thing: feeling safe. With AI, there is no worry about
being judged. No fear of saying the wrong thing. No awkwardness. About 1
in 4 participants said they actually found it easier to talk openly
with AI — because it communicates in a way that feels clear, calm, and
natural, much like everyday conversation.
The truth is, some things are just easier to say when no one is
watching. That is not a flaw in human nature — it is simply how many of
us work.
When it came to privacy, the findings were equally reassuring. More than
half of all participants said they had no concerns about AI handling
their personal information. Only a very small number — just 2.08% — said
they felt uncomfortable. This points to a growing sense of trust in AI
tools among the general public.
AI Reads the Data; Therapists Read the Person
Beyond the hypnotic experience itself, the local research team also
evaluated AI's capability as an analytical tool — with equally
impressive results.
AI was able to rapidly process large volumes of participant responses,
objectively assess individual stress levels, and identify underlying
patterns. For instance, AI identified that 35% of participants
independently expressed a desire for
"personal space" or
"better soundproofing" in their homes. On the surface, these may
seem like trivial lifestyle concerns — yet AI connected this pattern to
the reality of Hong Kong residents living in constrained spaces,
highlighting a deeper psychological sense of having
"nowhere to breathe". This level of insight would be difficult to uncover through manual review of dozens of questionnaires alone.
AI also observed that many participants habitually occupied the role of
"problem-solver" or
"mediator" within their households, suppressing their own
emotional needs in the process. Researchers noted that this reflects a
widely recognised social phenomenon — the pressures faced by eldest
daughters and the so-called
"sandwich generation," caught between the responsibilities of
caring for ageing parents and raising children. AI's ability to rapidly
identify these hidden emotional burdens allows therapists to bypass
lengthy preliminary assessments and focus more swiftly on the core
issues that require their attention.
AI Is Here to Help, Not to Take Over
The local research team emphasises that the study was never intended to
position AI as a replacement for human therapists. Rather, the aim is to
explore how the two can work in tandem. Much like how blood test
reports assist physicians in diagnosis, AI can play an analogous
supporting role in the mental health field — organising data,
identifying patterns, and lowering barriers to seeking help, so that
mental health professionals can direct their energy towards the moments
that truly require a human touch.
Those who proactively seek psychological support remain a minority,
often deterred by the fear of inconvenience, social stigma, or the
awkwardness of speaking up. If AI can serve as the bridge that
encourages more people to take that first step, that alone may be its
most meaningful contribution to society.