Abstract This paper examines converging evidence that a structural decline in face-to-face verbal interaction among young people, accelerated by frictionless digital technologies and the rapid adoption of conversational artificial intelligence (AI), is contributing to deteriorating mental health outcomes in youth populations. Drawing on a recent longitudinal analysis of spoken word decline (Pfeifer Li et al., 2025), and the broader socio-digital critique articulated by Haidt (2024), this paper argues that incidental human conversation functions as a critical mechanism through which young people develop the felt sense of significance, social fluency, and introspective capacity necessary for psychological well-being. The ongoing displacement of such interactions by self-service technologies and AI-mediated communication may be eroding these developmental foundations with measurable consequences for anxiety, depression, and behavioural dysregulation in K-12 and undergraduate populations. The paper concludes with implications for educational policy and future research directions.
Spring et al. (Thu,) studied this question.