Technology
CARMEN the robot companion can help boost your memory and cognition
Have you ever walked into a room and forgotten why you’re there? Or misplaced your keys for the umpteenth time this week? If you’ve been noticing these little memory hiccups more often, you’re not alone.
As we age, our cognitive functions can start to slow down, and for some, it might be a sign of mild cognitive impairment.
But don’t worry. Help is on the way in an unexpected form. Say hello to CARMEN, a new robot designed to give your brain the workout it needs.
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Carmen AI robot (University of California San Diego)
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What’s CARMEN, you ask?
CARMEN stands for Cognitively Assistive Robot for Motivation and Neurorehabilitation. Fancy name, right? But don’t worry, CARMEN’s job is simple — to help people with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) sharpen their mental skills from the comfort of their own homes. This small, tabletop robot was developed by researchers at the University of California San Diego.
Think of CARMEN as a personal trainer for your brain, ready to guide you through exercises that can boost your memory, enhance your attention and improve your problem-solving skills. What makes CARMEN special is that it’s the only robot out there that focuses on teaching compensatory cognitive strategies. In other words, it helps you find clever workarounds for cognitive challenges.
Carmen AI robot (University of California San Diego)
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Why CARMEN is a game-changer
Here’s the deal. About 20% of folks over 65 have MCI, which is like a middle ground between normal aging and dementia. It’s not just a minor inconvenience. Up to 15% of people with MCI transition to dementia each year. While there aren’t any miracle pills to stop MCI from progressing, behavioral treatments can make a real difference. That’s where CARMEN comes in.
As Laurel Riek, a professor at UC San Diego and the project’s senior author, puts it, “We wanted to make sure we were providing meaningful and practical inventions.”
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Carmen AI robot (University of California San Diego)
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What can CARMEN do for you?
Imagine having a personal trainer for your brain right on your tabletop. CARMEN leads you through fun, interactive games and activities designed to boost your memory, attention and problem-solving skills. If you need help remembering where you put your keys, CARMEN can teach you to create routine places for important objects.
If you’re struggling to keep track of appointments, CARMEN’s got note-taking strategies for that. These aren’t just random exercises. They’re part of a well-validated compensatory cognitive training (CCT) intervention, which CARMEN delivers autonomously.
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Carmen AI robot (University of California San Diego)
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The brains behind CARMEN
CARMEN wasn’t born in a vacuum. The clever folks at the University of California San Diego teamed up with doctors, people with MCI and their caregivers to create this little robot. They wanted to make sure CARMEN would be truly helpful in real-life situations.
The team designed CARMEN with some key features in mind. It’s plug-and-play, with few moving parts, so you can use it without supervision. It works even with limited internet access. It communicates clearly and shows empathy. It gives you breaks after tough tasks to keep you engaged.
Carmen AI robot (University of California San Diego)
CARMEN in action: What do users think?
After spending a week with CARMEN, users reported trying out new strategies they thought were impossible before. Most found CARMEN easy to use and understand, though one user did find it a bit challenging. The best part? Everyone wanted more time with their new robotic pal.
“We found that CARMEN gave participants confidence to use cognitive strategies in their everyday life, and participants saw opportunities for CARMEN to exhibit greater levels of autonomy or be used for other applications,”the researchers reported.
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Carmen AI robot (University of California San Diego))
The tech behind CARMEN
CARMEN is built on the FLEXI robot platform from the University of Washington. However, the UC San Diego team made significant hardware modifications and wrote all the software from scratch. They’re using ROS (Robot Operating System) to run CARMEN’s brain.
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Carmen AI robot (University of California San Diego)
What’s next for CARMEN?
The team is planning to test CARMEN in more homes. It also wants to teach CARMEN how to have conversations while keeping your privacy safe. This is both an accessibility issue and a response to people’s expectations of being able to talk with home systems. The researchers are also exploring how CARMEN might help people with other conditions, like ADHD.
But they’re being careful too. As Riek notes, “We want to be mindful that the user still needs to do the bulk of the work, so the robot can only assist and not give too many hints.”
While we don’t know the eventual cost or exact release date yet, CARMEN’s development shows promise for accessible, at-home cognitive support in the future.
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Similar technologies in brain training
While CARMEN represents an exciting development in cognitive assistance for those with mild cognitive impairment, it’s worth noting that it’s not the only player in the field of brain training technology. We’ve previously covered another innovative system called Sens.ai, which offers a different approach to cognitive enhancement.
Sens.ai is a 5-in-1 brain training system that uses a comfortable headset and a gamified app to help users achieve various cognitive goals. Unlike CARMEN, which is specifically designed for those with mild cognitive impairment, Sens.ai caters to a broader audience looking to improve sleep, cognition, well-being or meditation skills.
The Sens.ai system employs a range of advanced technologies, including brainwave sensors, heart rate monitors, transcranial photobiomodulation, and objective functional brain testing. These tools work together to measure and enhance brain performance across different areas of cognitive function.
While CARMEN is still in the research phase, Sens.ai is already available to consumers, offering a free trial of its membership program. It’s backed by scientific research and has garnered positive testimonials from users.
The existence of technologies like Sens.ai alongside research projects like CARMEN demonstrates the growing interest and investment in cognitive enhancement tools. As this field continues to evolve, we may see a variety of options become available to support brain health and cognitive function for different user needs and preferences.
Kurt’s key takeaways
CARMEN represents an exciting step forward in how we approach cognitive health. By bringing clinically validated exercises into people’s homes through a friendly, interactive robot, we’re making brain health more accessible and engaging. While CARMEN is still in the research phase, it’s not hard to imagine a future where these kinds of AI assistants become common household helpers, especially for our aging population. They could be a game-changer in extending independence and quality of life for many people.
So, what do you think? Would you welcome a little robot like CARMEN into your home to help keep your mind sharp? Let us know by writing us at Cyberguy.com/Contact
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Technology
Apple just had a record-breaking iPhone quarter
Apple says the iPhone had its “best-ever” quarter, with revenue hitting more than $85.3 billion over the past few months. The company announced the news as part of its Q1 2026 earnings report, which also revealed record-breaking revenue of $143.8 billion, up 16 percent when compared to the same time last year.
“iPhone had its best-ever quarter driven by unprecedented demand, with all-time records across every geographic segment, and Services also achieved an all-time revenue record, up 14 percent from a year ago,” Apple CEO Tim Cook says in the press release.
Apple’s services revenue, which includes subscriptions like Apple Music, iCloud, and Apple TV surged 14 percent year over year, while Mac and wearable revenue were down.
In the coming months, Apple will bring promised AI-powered personalization features to Siri. Apple is partnering with Google to power this upgrade, which will use a custom version of Google’s Gemini AI model.
The company is also acquiring an AI startup, called Q.ai, for $2 billion, according to the Financial Times. Though there aren’t any details on how Apple plans to use the startup’s technology, the Financial Times reports that Q.ai’s patents “show its technology being used in headphones or glasses, using ‘facial skin micro movements’ to communicate without talking.”
Technology
Humanoid robot makes architectural history by designing a building
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What happens when artificial intelligence (AI) moves from painting portraits to designing homes? That question is no longer theoretical.
At the Utzon Center in Denmark, Ai-Da Robot, the world’s first ultra-realistic robot artist, has made history as the first humanoid robot to design a building.
The project, called Ai-Da: Space Pod, is a modular housing concept created for future bases on the Moon and Mars. CyberGuy has covered Ai-Da before, when her work focused on drawing, painting and performance art. That earlier coverage showed how a robot could create original artwork in real time and why it sparked global debate.
Now, the shift is clear. Ai-Da is moving beyond art and into physical spaces designed for humans and robots to live in.
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Ai-Da Robot is the humanoid artist that made architectural history by becoming the first robot to design a building. (FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP via Getty Images)
Inside the ‘I’m not a robot’ exhibition
The exhibition “I’m not a robot” has just opened at Utzon Center and runs through October. It explores the creative capacity of machines at a time when robots are increasingly able to think and create for themselves. Visitors can experience Ai-Da’s drawings, paintings and architectural concepts. Throughout the exhibition period, visitors can also follow Ai-Da’s creative process through sketches, paintings and a video interview.
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How Ai-Da creates art and architecture
Ai-Da is not a digital avatar or animation. She has camera eyes, specially developed AI algorithms and a robotic arm that allows her to draw and paint in real time. Developed in Oxford and built in Cornwall in 2019, Ai-Da works across disciplines. She is a painter, sculptor, poet, performer and now an architectural designer whose work is meant to provoke reflection.
“Ai-Da presents a concept for a shared residential area called Ai-Da: Space Pod, a foreshadowing of a future where AI becomes an integrated part of architecture,” explains Aidan Meller, creator of Ai-Da and Director of Ai-Da Robot. “With intelligent systems, a building will be able to sense and respond to its occupants, adjusting light, temperature and digital interfaces according to needs and moods.”
A building designed for humans and robots
The Space Pod is intentionally modular. Each unit can connect to others through corridors, creating a shared residential environment.
Through a series of paintings, she envisions a home and studio for humans or robots alike. According to the Ai-Da Robot team, these designs could evolve into fully realized architectural models through 3D renderings and construction. They could also adapt to planned Moon or Mars base camps.
Aidan Meller presents Ai-Da robot, the first AI-powered robot artist during the UN Global Summit on AI for Good, where they are giving the keynote speech, on July 7, 2023, in Geneva, Switzerland. (Johannes Simon/Getty Images for Aidan Meller)
While the concept targets future bases on the Moon and Mars, the design can also be built as a prototype on Earth. That detail matters as space agencies prepare for longer missions beyond our planet.
“With our first crewed Moon landing in 50 years coming in 2027, Ai-Da: Space Pod is a simple unit connected to other Pods via corridors,” Meller said. “Ai-Da is a humanoid designing homes. This raises questions about where architecture may go when powerful AI systems gain greater agency.” The timing also aligns with renewed lunar exploration tied to NASA missions.
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Why this exhibition is meant to challenge you
According to Meller, the exhibition is meant to feel uncomfortable at times. “Technology is developing at an extraordinary pace in these years,“ he said, pointing to emotional recognition through biometric data, CRISPR gene editing and brain computer interfaces. Each carries promise and ethical risk. He references Brave New World and warnings from Yuval Harari about how powerful technologies may be used.
In that context, Ai-Da becomes a mirror of our time. “Ai-Da is confrontational. The very fact that she exists is confrontational,” said Line Nørskov Davenport, Director of Exhibitions at Utzon Center. “She is an AI shaker, a conversation starter.”
Aidan Meller, British Gallery owner and specialist in modern and contemporary art, stands beside the AI robot artist “Ai-Da” at the Great Pyramids of Giza, where she exhibits her sculpture during an international art show, on the outskirt of Cairo, Egypt, Oct. 23, 2021. (REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany)
What this means for you
This story goes beyond robots and space travel. Ai-Da’s Space Pod shows how quickly AI is moving from a creative tool to a decision-maker. Architecture, housing and shared spaces shape daily life. When AI enters those fields, questions about control, ethics and accountability become unavoidable. If a robot can design homes for the Moon, it may soon influence how buildings function here on Earth.
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Kurt’s key takeaways
A humanoid robot designing a building once sounded impossible. Today, Ai-Da’s work sits inside a major cultural institution and sparks real debate. She offers no easy answers. Instead, she pushes us to think more critically about creativity, technology and responsibility. As the line between human and machine continues to blur, those questions matter more than ever.
If AI can design the homes of our future, how much creative control should humans be willing to give up? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.
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Technology
Halide co-founder Sebastiaan de With is joining Apple’s design team
I’ve never been more optimistic about the future of Lux and Halide. Today we launched the public preview of Halide Mark III, and the reception is more positive than we possibly could have hoped.
As we mentioned in the announcement post today, we’ve been working with legendary team at The Iconfactory on Mark III. We’re also super excited to be collaborating with the renowned colorist Cullen Kelly on the new looks in Mark III.
Ten years ago I started Halide, and for ten years, I lead product, ran the business, and coded almost everything. Except for the paywall. I hate working on payment screens. But I built everything else, and design was always a collaborative experience.
So in short, Halide is going nowhere. This has been my full time job since 2019, and I couldn’t imagine doing anything else.
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