<p>1 Introduction<br>Section A Digital Data Collection and Analysis<br>2 Information technology and electronic health record to improve behavioral health services<br>3 Big data and the goal of personalized health interventions<br>4 Collecting data from Internet (and other platform) users for mental health research<br>5 Ecological momentary assessment and other digital technologies for capturing daily life in mental health<br>6 Social media big data analysis for mental health research<br>Section B Communication, pscyhoeducation, screening<br>7 Telepsychiatry and video-to-home (including security issues)<br>8 Social Media and Clinical Practice<br>9 Websites and the validity of mental health care information<br>10 Digital phenotyping<br>11 The digital therapeutic relationship: Retaining humanity in the digital age<br>Section C Problematic use of the Internet<br>12 Gambling disorder, gaming disorder, cybershopping, and other addictive/impulsive disorders online<br>13 Cyberchondria, cyberhoarding, and other compulsive online disorders<br>14 Internet-use disorders: A theoretical framework for their conceptualization and diagnosis<br>15 Cybersex (including sex robots)<br>16 Developmental aspects (including cyberbullying)<br>Section D Interventions<br>17 Internet-based psychotherapies<br>18 Apps for mental health<br>19 Clinical interventions for technology-based problems<br>20 Scaling up of mental health services in the digital age: The rise of technology and its application to low- and middle-income countries<br>21 Addiction, autonomy, and the Internet: Some ethical considerations</p>