About Therapist in the Loop (TIL)
Therapist in the Loop grew out of our work building a practice management platform, OneClick, and our conversations with clinicians about how technology, including AI, is beginning to shape mental health practice.
Today, TIL is a separate educational initiative and community focused on research and trends at the intersection of AI and mental health.
While our work is centered on therapists and mental-health professionals, it has also drawn interest from researchers, professors, and others thinking about the future of care.
TIL is for psychologists, mental-health professionals, researchers, and others working in or alongside the field who want to engage thoughtfully with how AI is entering clinical work.
We share what we are learning from papers, people, practice, and our two fields, psychology and data science, in two formats:
Research Finder
Easy-to-track research, with editor notes and concise summaries that make new findings easier to follow.
Perspectives
In-depth reflections on the questions, tensions, and implications emerging in frontline clinical practice.
Our goal is to help clinicians feel more informed and better equipped to think clearly about AI in mental health.
We draw on our backgrounds to keep the content clinically informed and technically accurate. But our content is meant to support, not replace, professional judgment.
Clinical judgment comes first.
Katherine Gibb, M.Ed.
Editor & Contributor
Katherine is a Montreal-based psychologist in private practice who believes clinicians have an important role to play in shaping technology innovation, and is exploring how they can best participate in it so that technology can, in turn, support clinical work and strengthen care.
She co-founded OneClick Practice, a platform designed for the needs of solo practitioners, after seeing the need for billing and scheduling tools better adapted to her own solo practice.

Hassan Rezaee, Ph.D.
Editor & Contributor
Hassan is a Montreal-based data scientist with 8 years of machine learning experience and postdoctoral training. He is interested in the intersection of data science, clinical practice, and mental health.
He co-founded OneClick Practice, a platform designed to help solo practitioners run their practice in fewer clicks.
