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How IEEE Awardee Karen Panetta Became Bewitched by Engineering

2026-06-25 02:00:01



When considering the 1960s sitcoms Bewitched and I Dream of Jeannie, both of which featured women with supernatural powers navigating life with mortals, most people wouldn’t connect them with pursuing an engineering career. But Karen Panetta did. The sitcoms’ main characters—Samantha Stevens, a witch; and Jeannie, a genie—were “strong, empowered female leads using magic,” Panetta says, and they inspired her to become an engineer, as it was like sorcery to her.

Panetta, an IEEE Fellow, is dean of graduate education at the Tufts University engineering school, in Medford, Mass., outside of Boston.

Karen Panetta


Employer

Tufts University, in Medford, Mass.

Title

Dean of the engineering school’s graduate education

Member grade

IEEE Fellow

Alma maters

Boston University and Northeastern University in Boston

Like Samantha and Jeannie, Panetta has made magic happen, such as when she helped to invent the first CPU digital-twin simulator. Digital twins are computer simulation programs that track and adjust the operations of a physical device in detail. Her simulator has been adapted for several industrial uses, including by NASA to help design spacecraft.

Panetta also mentors young women to encourage them to pursue a STEM career through the Nerd Girls program she launched at Tufts in 2000. Engineering undergraduate students work on technology for socially conscious projects such as environmental cleanup, renewable energy, and the development of assistive devices to improve mobility for people with disabilities.

Panetta received this year’s IEEE Mildred Dresselhaus Medal for “contributions to computer vision and simulation algorithms, and for leadership in developing programs to promote STEM careers.” The award, sponsored by Google, was presented at the IEEE Honors Ceremony on 24 April in New York City.

Receiving the medal is particularly special to Panetta, she says, because she knew its namesake: Mildred Dresselhaus, an IEEE Life Fellow who pioneered the study of carbon nanostructures at a time when researching physical and material properties of commonplace atoms was unpopular. She was a MIT professor of physics and electrical engineering, and died in 2017.

Panetta nominated Dresselhaus for the IEEE Medal of Honor, which she received in 2015.

“Millie was a rock star,” Panetta says. “I can’t think of another medal that really encapsulates her spirit and what I’ve dedicated my life to.”

Finding a creative outlet in engineering

As a child growing up in Boston, Panetta built trapdoors and other features in her treehouse, she says.

“I also explored fashion and sewed my own clothes,” she adds. “I wasn’t very successful, but I was very creative.”

She was a top performer in math and science classes in high school, so her father encouraged her to pursue civil engineering.

“I didn’t know what an engineer was, and my father, who was a mechanic working on heavy construction equipment, only knew about civil engineers,” Panetta says. “I started taking computer programming classes at school, but knowing how to type on a keyboard and make a software program wasn’t good enough for me. I wanted to know what was inside the box.”

Her thirst for knowledge inspired her to pursue a bachelor’s degree in computer engineering at Boston University.

“My father was very disappointed that I didn’t pick civil engineering,” she says, laughing.

She commuted to school, and she struggled to find study groups for her classes, so she joined IEEE to connect with peers.

She became active in the university’s student branch, organizing events including the IEEE Student Professional Awareness Conference, which helps students learn practical career skills including résumé building, interviewing, and networking. She organized a SPAC for her branch, and IEEE Life Senior Member Jim Watson volunteered to speak at the event. It changed her life, she says.

Watson was the director of commercial and industrial marketing at Ohio Edison in Akron, where he worked for 36 years.

“He flew to Boston to speak at our event, but fewer than 20 students attended. I was embarrassed,” Panetta says. But Watson told her the important lesson was that she showed up and organized the event.

“He said I would be successful because of that,” she says. “He didn’t care about the attendees’ grade point averages, only that we were professional enough to organize the talk.

“That encouragement was the first time anyone outside of my family ever told me that I would succeed, so it was reaffirming. To this day, I still use some of the techniques that I learned in his presentation in my own classroom to teach students.”

Panetta graduated in 1986. Her IEEE membership helped her get hired for her first dream job: a diagnostic engineer at Digital Equipment Corp.

While attending the IEEE Computer Society’s annual symposium on very large-scale integration in Boston, she handed her résumé to a DEC representative, who hired her to work in Hudson, Mass.

While working full time, Panetta attended Northeastern University, in Boston, as a part-time graduate student. She earned a master’s degree in electrical engineering in 1988.

Developing the first CPU digital twin

In the early 1990s, Panetta was assigned to work with Ernst Ulrich, one of DEC’s most respected consulting engineers, she says. He was developing a new CPU using millions of CMOS transistors.

“I thought, ‘Wow, what a great opportunity,’” she says, “not realizing they assigned it to me because no one else wanted to work with him, as he set rigorous standards, expecting those who worked with him to think outside of the box and hold their own to bullet-proof new concepts.”

Panetta and Ulrich wanted the ability to test the CPU while still designing the hardware and software. That way, both would be ready to use at the same time. Typically, the hardware was developed before the software was written.

“We decided that we were going to simulate the machine to see how it was going to run—which was unheard of,” she says.

During a meeting with the company’s top engineers, Panetta shared her idea for an algorithm that could accomplish the team’s goal. She was met with silence.

“It’s going to be the engineers who better society because we know how to work together. We’ve proven that IEEE members know how to work across geographic boundaries, ethnic boundaries, and gender boundaries. And that’s a good model for the world.”

“I thought to myself, ‘Did I just say something stupid?’” she says. “But then, the top engineer looked at me and said, ‘I have been doing this for 50 years, and you, a kid just out of school, comes up with this [solution] like it’s obvious.’”

Her idea became the basis for the digital twin simulator. It used behavioral models to run software on a CPU simulation. The software passes information through the system, she says, just like it would pass information through wires or interconnects.

“We did successfully have a complete model of millions of transistors,” Panetta says. “I efficiently simulated hundreds of thousands of experiments and ran the software on this simulated model so that we knew exactly how it was going to perform on the real machine. That had never been done before.”

Her groundbreaking work led to a promotion: from computer analyst to principal software engineer.

When she began managing a team and hiring staff members, Panetta noticed the younger employees knew the theory but didn’t have the technical skills to hit the ground running, she says.

“It took the company two years to train somebody before they could really contribute technically to a team,” she says. She decided she wanted to help prepare students for jobs in industry.

In 1995 she was accepted into DEC’s Engineers and Education program, in which full-time employees who wanted to teach could take a leave of absence to complete a degree while still being paid. Participants were then placed in academic institutions for two-year stints to help students bridge the gap between classroom theory and real-world problem-solving.

After earning a Ph.D. in electrical engineering from Northeastern in 1994, Panetta began her teaching assignment at Tufts. After one year, she left her job at DEC to join the university as its first female electrical engineering professor. At the time, the department had only one female undergraduate EE student.

“I showed up to work dressed in an all-pink suit,” she says, laughing. “Other professors looked at me like I didn’t belong there because I looked different.”

She didn’t let that stand in the way of reaching her goals: preparing the next generation of students for jobs and mentoring young women who were interested in becoming engineers but who felt they wouldn’t be accepted and therefore couldn’t pursue a career in the field.

Launching the Nerd Girls program

When Panetta began teaching, she noticed that students weren’t getting any hands-on engineering experience, so in 1996 she created an internship program. It was the precursor to Nerd Girls.

At the time, she was consulting for NASA’s data visualization and animation lab in Langley, Va., translating complex information into a user-friendly animated form. The programs visualized Earth’s atmosphere and identified pollutants, their origins, and their effects on people and the environment.

Panetta needed a larger team to help conduct the research, so she asked her undergraduate students if they wanted to participate.

“Female students flocked to me because they could relate to the work I was doing, loved how their skills could benefit humanity, and didn’t see me as the classic nerd professor with no life,” Panetta said in a 2008 interview with The Institute about the program. “Eventually, the girls outnumbered the boys.”

“The research project ended up winning awards,” she added. “Tufts couldn’t believe that undergrads had a hand in it. That’s when things really turned around.”

Nerd Girls officially launched at Tufts in 2000 as a class where students work closely with industry on engineering projects. Examples have included building a solar-powered car, developing a battery for the last functioning twin lighthouse in the United States, and creating devices to help people train service animals.

“Everyone who has participated in the program graduated with a bachelor’s degree,” Panetta says. “I’m also very proud that 98 percent of participants pursue a graduate degree within three years of earning their bachelor’s.”

The program is open to all students, regardless of gender.

Creating a community at IEEE

Panetta became an active IEEE volunteer in 2004 after meeting Arthur Winston, the IEEE president at the time. Winston, an IEEE Life Fellow, was an electrical engineering professor at Tufts. He helped found the Gordon Institute, a leadership-focused engineering school at the university.

“I sat next to him on a bus, and he invited me to attend the IEEE Boston Section meetings,” she says.

Panetta eventually was elected by the section as a member-at-large—which allowed her to attend conferences and other events.

To help spread the word about the Nerd Girls program throughout IEEE, Winston connected Panetta to Mary Ellen Randall, who was chair of IEEE Women in Engineering at the time. Randall is the current IEEE president and CEO. Panetta joined IEEE WIE and was elected as its 2007–2009 chair.

In that position, she worked with Randall and Leah Jamieson, the 2007 IEEE president, to hire more staff to support the program and launch its magazine.

“At that time, we didn’t have any way to connect to members or tell the stories of women in technology,” Panetta says. “I wanted people to read the stories of women from around the globe and how they overcame adversity. So I launched the IEEE Women in Engineering Magazine in 2007.”

Panetta serves as the award-winning publication’s editor in chief, and she is a member of several other IEEE societies and committees.

IEEE is helping to change the world for the better, she says.

“It’s going to be the engineers who better society,” she says, “because we know how to work together.

“We’ve proven that IEEE members know how to work across geographic boundaries, ethnic boundaries, and gender boundaries. And that’s a good model for the world.”

Make an Origami Circuit Board

2026-06-24 22:00:01



What could you do if you could make a circuit trace by just bending a piece of paper? How about bridging modern technologies and traditional handicrafts while providing opportunities for learning skills in both.

As part of our interdisciplinary research into digital craftsmanship at the MEI Lab at the School of Creative Media, City University of Hong Kong, we came across research that demonstrated how to impregnate paperlike material (technically a “nonwoven textile”) with the kind of liquid metal used to make conductive ink. Initially, the impregnated material is nonconductive because an insulating oxide layer forms that encapsulates microscopic droplets of the liquid metal. However, applying pressure via shaped molds will crack open the insulating layer, allowing neighboring particles to merge, and thus creating conducting regions in the shape of the mold.

Both of us were introduced as children to origami and kirigami (similar to origami, except that cutting is allowed in addition to folding). We, along with our colleagues, decided to see if those traditional techniques could be used on the new material to eliminate the need for molds. Our goal was to allow crafters to make hybrid papercraft creations that contained easily integrated elements such as LEDs and motors.

In particular, we were interested in the possibility of combining the separate stages of creating a papercraft object and adding electrical conductors. Previous approaches to creating electrified papercraft objects relied on adding a separate flexible conductor—such as adhesive copper tape—to the paper. This increases the effort required and runs the risk of creating open circuits as the conductive material conforms to the object’s shape.

The principal items required to make hybrid papercraft objects.Isopropanol and a gallium-indium liquid material are used to impregnate a paperlike material that is 55 percent polyester and 45 percent cellulose. Electronic components such as LEDs and motors are held in place with masking tape. James Provost

Our first step was to see if the pressures involved in bending and cutting alone would be sufficient to create conductive traces. We became frequent visitors to our university’s materials science and engineering department to fabricate samples and then to borrow equipment to characterize their behavior.

We soon confirmed that the pressures involved in folding and cutting—ranging from 2.5 to 100 megapascals—were enough to create conductive traces. We also confirmed that normal handling of the paper didn’t accidentally create conductive paths.

We made a number of changes to the original method for creating the impregnated paper. For example, instead of immersing the paper in a mixture of isopropanol and liquid metal, we used an airbrush to spray the mixture onto the paper. That allowed us to vary how much was deposited on the paper and to use cardboard stencils to mask some areas from being impregnated, allowing folding and cutting in those regions without creating unwanted conductive traces. We also experimented with the ratios of isopropanol and liquid metal.

We became frequent visitors to our university’s materials science and engineering department.

After optimizing the mixing ratios and amount applied via airbrush, we were left with a material that reliably conducts with a resistance of 23.18 ohms per centimeter for cut edges and 4.4 Ω/cm for folded edges. The folded edges retain their conductivity even if later flattened out, and the conductivity is the same on either side of the paper. We estimate the combined cost of the paper and liquid metal (available from many online vendors) is about US $1.80 to make a 10- by 10-cm piece.

The next step was attaching electronic components to the traces. To make the connections more flexible, we cut down the rigid leads of LEDs and attached conductive thread to the stumps. We then held the threads in place using masking tape. Similarly, we connected conductive thread to the terminals of a power supply.

As our goal was to use this material educationally, we now needed to make it easy for a beginner—whether in papercraft or electronics—to try it out. We created a toolkit, dubbed LiqMetCraft. This consists of all the required materials, plus a browser-based software tool that lets the user select or create designs and then gives guidance on physical construction.

We created three versions of LiqMetCraft. The first is based on Chinese papercraft in which a piece of paper is folded into a fanlike segment and then cut to create a radially symmetric design. We provided circles of paper with a doughnot-shape impregnated region, with an untreated region that created a gap in the donut. We attached positive and negative terminals to either side of the gap. The user could specify in the software how many times they wanted to fold the disk and then draw potential cuts, receiving immediate feedback on what the unfolded disk would look like, as well as guidance on how to place LEDs.

A diagram illustrating the primary steps of making and applying the liquid metal mixture. To make our paper sample, isopropanol and liquid metal are mixed in specific ratios while being cooled by an ice bath. Sonic waves are used to ensure the liquid metal breaks up into microscopic droplets. The mixture is then applied via airbrush, while stencils prevent some areas being covered for different papercraft templates. James Provost

The second version of LiqMetCraft was based on origami. We supplied rectangular pieces of paper with two conductive regions separated by a border down the middle. The software tool provided templates for 12 origami designs, with step-by-step instructions for folding them. Once the project was completed, the user could add components, such as a motor, by taping them to the folds.

The final version supported 3D paper model making. In this case, the initial paper supplied was a rectangle with an untreated rectangular central area. By cutting this paper in half and then further cutting the halves into patterns separated by a spacer, the user could make various self-standing models. The software allowed the user to draw a pattern on screen, and then have a cutting machine produce a template for cutting the impregnated paper.

We had 42 participants, evenly divided into three groups, try out the different versions. All found it easy to use, and we were pleasantly surprised that some participants moved beyond the supplied designs to their own creations.

For full details of the current process, see our open access LiqMetCraft research paper published in CHI ‘26: Proceedings of the 2026 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. In the future, we plan to try different substrates for the impregnating solution, as well as explore further types of papercraft, such as pop-up books. We’re also interested in developing ways to use the material to support inputs as well as outputs by constructing switches and potentiometers directly out of the material. Imagine traditional papercraft creations becoming interactive devices!

AI Is Designing Radio Chips That Humans Couldn’t Even Imagine

2026-06-24 21:00:01



Summary

  • RFIC design is a complex “dark art” that limits progress in wireless technologies like 5G, autonomous vehicles, and satellite communications.
  • Princeton researchers use reinforcement learning and inverse design to rapidly create RFICs from scratch.
  • Diffusion models rapidly generate novel or human-interpretable RF layouts, achieving record performance and drastically reducing design time.
  • Future progress needs large, shared chip design datasets and open ecosystems so AI can learn universal electromagnetic and circuit behaviors.

Take a moment and try to imagine your life without the wireless advances of the past three decades.

Have you lost your luggage? What a shame AirTags have not been invented. The airline representative has promised to call with updates, so settle in for a long wait by the kitchen telephone, because there are no affordable cellphones. You’ll be stuck listening to whatever is on the radio while you wait, because there are no streaming services. That’s not even to speak of all the movie plots that would have been ruined.

This is just a tiny sliver of how wireless technology makes itself felt in your day-to-day existence. The effects it has had on supply chains, infrastructure, and how the economy runs have been world-altering.

None of it would be possible without the radio-frequency integrated circuits that allow all our devices to unobtrusively send and receive information.

Now imagine what the further evolution of this technology will bring: Wide-spread autonomous vehicles, quantum communications, 6G mobile service and satellite communications. Continued momentum will depend on newer and more advanced versions of today’s RF chips.

But there’s the rub. Whereas the design of most of the world’s computing chips has been standardized into its own science, RF design has remained stubbornly in the realm of art. A dark art, even, that is mastered only through years of experience. As any sorcerer will tell you, the dark arts keep their own schedule. And that schedule is impeding progress not just in RF chip design but in every other technology that depends on it.

About seven years ago, in the wake of AlphaGo’s victory over world Go champion Lee Sedol, my students at Princeton and I began to wonder: Could AI be taught this art as well? Recent successes suggest that, to a large extent, it can. Over the last few years, our group and other leaders in the field have started to develop machine-learning-driven algorithmic methods for designing RFICs. Some of the resulting chips look more like modern art than circuit layouts. Yet in many cases, the physical prototypes bested state-of-the art circuits in terms of performance. The real achievement, however, is that it took the AI orders of magnitude less time to conceive a working design than it would a human designer.

This is not about one or two RF chips. AI-enabled design could be the future of all RF design, and maybe much more.

The Dark Art of RFIC Design

So why do these chips all have to be crafted by hand? Why aren’t RFICs designed with an algorithmic synthesis process, much as CPUs and GPUs are?

The design of RFICs is an exercise in engineering across multiple physical domains. Maxwell’s equations, operating across different spatial and temporal scales, govern how electromagnetic fields interact with active and passive devices that must be carefully codesigned for the chip to function. Alongside these are the laws of thermodynamics, which determine how heat is generated and removed during operation, as well as the mechanics of thermal expansion and contraction that dictate how reliably the chip and its packaging survive temperature changes.

AI Could Short-Circuit RFIC Design

Flowchart comparing slow human chip design steps with faster AI\u2011driven processThe design of a radio-frequency integrated circuit requires human intuition and multiple, often-repeated optimization steps. The hope is that through an understanding of Maxwell’s Equations, an AI can be taught to short-circuit this process and quickly produce a design.

Simultaneously accounting for all the physical constraints these impose makes the design space almost impossibly large. Every decision involves complex priorities that often compete with one another, preventing the optimization of any of them.

To better understand the issue, let’s walk through the steps involved, after which you’ll better understand why a single new chip design takes years and tens to hundreds of millions of dollars.

Colorful close-up of a microchip die showing intricate circuits and connection pads

Close-up of a glowing gold microchip circuit with dense patterned components.

Close-up of a microchip die with intricate golden circuit patterns and pads.

Close-up of a patterned microchip die with intricate gold circuitry on a dark background

Close-up of an intricate gold microchip circuit pattern on a dark background

Microscope view of intricate gold microchip circuitry with numbered frame \u201c6\u201d.Most of the area of radio-frequency integrated circuits is dominated by complex electromagnetic structures. Human-designed RFICs, like this broadband power amplifier [1], start with templates and follow a symmetric, understandable pattern. But freed from the constraints of human-designed templates and the need for humans to even understand the rationale of electromagnetic structures, power amplifier ICs [2–5] and low-noise amplifiers [6] can take on truly wild-looking yet efficient designs. SENGUPTA LAB

Let’s say you’re an engineer assigned to design a new 28-gigahertz power amplifier for a 5G-millimeter-wave handset. (This is the type of RFIC that boosts the 5G signals on your phone and transmits them to the antenna where they can be picked up by a distant base station). Where do you start?

RFIC design has some features in common with house building. Just as the blueprint for a house dictates the number of bedrooms and bathrooms to be built and the hallways connecting them, the blueprint for an RFIC—called the architecture—establishes the kinds of elements the RFIC needs to fulfill its intended function. Instead of rooms, the architecture includes, for example, the number of stages of amplification your power amplifier needs. Instead of hallways, it shows the paths that signals must take to get through those stages.

The blueprint for RFICs is actually mostly hallway; passive elements, like inductors and transmission lines, take up far more real estate than active elements like transistors.

Here’s why. As you have probably experienced yourself, a typical CPU’s transistors overheat when faced with operating frequencies of just a few gigahertz. The frequencies RFICs can operate at are higher by an order of magnitude—28 and 39 GHz for 5G signals, 26.5 to 40 GHz and even higher for satellite communications, and 77 GHz for automotive radar. Under this onslaught, a CPU’s transistors would fail.

RFIC transistors avoid this fate because these chips cleverly manage the signal’s energy with careful electromagnetic design. This takes the form of byzantine networks of metal elements that dominate the chip’s real estate. These structures are geometrically regular, often symmetrical, and so intricately constructed they sometimes resemble lacelike filigree. But while they may look decorative, they are essential to the chip’s functioning.

Electrically speaking, these “hallways” work more like the chip’s plumbing. Like plumbing, this extensive labyrinth of passives confines electromagnetic energy only to the places it should be traveling around the chip.

The major challenge in RFIC design is putting all these elements together to ensure they work, just as constructing a house from its blueprints demands exact specs for load-bearing beams, pipes, and external walls. On an RFIC, the architecture needs to be realized with physically fabricable transistors and passive components that are connected just so, to permit the signal to travel through the chip and be processed. The way these devices are connected locally is what we call the circuit’s topology.

The RFIC Design Process

To make that power amplifier, then, your first step is to identify a candidate circuit template: The combination of structures that will meet the goals of a particular architecture with a specific circuit topology. Over the years, researchers have eased your burden by developing reusable design templates for specific functions. For example, templates suggest how many amplification stages a circuit needs (because sometimes, combining the output of two smaller amplifiers will result in better bandwidth and efficiency than you would get from a single larger one). And they suggest what the general configuration of the passive structures should be. Today there is an extensive library of such templates.

However, these can’t simply be used off-the-shelf, because each comes with trade-offs. Some have better gain at the expense of stability; some better bandwidth at the expense of efficiency; still others are more energy efficient at the expense of output power, and so on. There is rarely a clear best choice.

To arrive at the “sweet spot” where all these different parameters are balanced into optimal harmony, designers will typically lay out several different versions of the circuit, using intuitions and methods they have picked up in their years of training.

The challenge is that the decision around the architecture, circuit topology, or the electromagnetic passives cannot be done separately. One decision influences the others. So, designing an RF circuit can often feel like trying to fit an oversized carpet into too small a room—press down one corner, and another pops up.

At microwave and millimeter-wave frequencies, even the smallest misstep is the difference between a chip that works and one that doesn’t, and any number of things can go wrong. For example, when an electromagnetic wave encounters a transistor—or any other component —the path it travels must be properly “matched” to what comes next. If it isn’t, some of the energy reflects backward instead of flowing forward. Imagine trying to connect a high-pressure fire hose directly to a narrow garden hose. Without the right adapter, water will splash backward at the junction. Very little will make it through. In electronics, this is called the impedance-matching problem.

To prevent those reflections, engineers design special transitions, essentially microscopic adapters, that smooth the handoff between components. On a chip, these adapters can be surprisingly intricate. They don’t just pass the signal along; they can also split it, combine it, or distribute it across multiple paths with carefully controlled timing and strength.

Once you’ve done the architecture, plumbing, and everything in between comes the moment of truth. Have all the choices you have navigated through the enormous design space resulted in an RFIC that meets its specifications? If the specifications are not met, you will have to go back, either redoing the topology or the entire architecture, and repeat the whole process. So get ready for months of time- and resource-heavy simulation and iteration. Perhaps you now see why, for decades, a core belief has persisted in the RFIC community: “RF design is an art.” It was said that only an experienced designer—with an artisanal understanding of how the pieces make up the whole—could master the subtleties of analog and RF design. Unfortunately, this entrenched notion has long held back algorithmic innovations in the field just when we need them most. Traditional, artisanal RFIC design is hitting its limits as the complexity of these systems inexorably grows.

AI for RFIC Design

While RFIC designers continued their battle against their “oversized carpet” problem, a series of interesting developments emerged in allied disciplines. Across a range of other previously intractable problems like protein folding and climate modeling, AI has been able to successfully navigate multidimensional complex spaces. This gave us the incentive to look deeper into AI for RF. After all, the combinatorial complexity of protein folding is not that different from the nature of the design space in our domain.

We were not the first to think of using artificial intelligence to speed up parts of RFIC design. Researchers had previously trained machine learning algorithms on circuit templates in the hope of speeding up the normal optimization processes. While this approach was undoubtedly faster than humans at optimizing templates, it still relied fundamentally on libraries of existing designs invented by humans.

Training an AI to Design a Chip

Flowchart of RL and generative AI optimizing RFIC electromagnetic networksA machine learning system learns to do end-to-end RFIC design like other AIs learned to play such games as Go. Essentially, it turns the process into a game, learning from the results of its own efforts.

We didn’t want that. We wanted to break free from the restrictions of prefabricated topologies. Because while a designer’s experience and hard-won heuristics are crucial to building a working design, they also place fundamental limits on it. Furthermore, such an approach would necessarily require simulation steps as part of the optimization cycle, and even the fastest simulations use a lot of computing resources. Worse still, in many advanced cases, such as for broadband designs, there are no existing templates.

But if we didn’t start with templates, where could we start?

The goal here was to allow algorithms to determine—entirely from scratch—every parameter for architecture, constituent circuits, and electromagnetic passives. This approach differs fundamentally from conventional optimization, which is limited to determining the parameters—like transistor dimensions and passive component geometries—that optimize structures originally devised by humans.

In our new approach, the architecture begins essentially from nothing and is progressively assembled through successive iterations. The system explores the design space by generating myriad candidate circuit combinations and mapping the resulting performance trade-offs as it navigates this landscape. Because the process is not biased by prior human design choices, it can produce completely novel circuit topologies that look markedly different from those created by human designers.

In some ways, the approach echoes AI systems such as AlphaGo Zero, which achieved superhuman performance not because it was trained on games played by humans but because it explored the rules by playing against itself. Similarly, our algorithm develops new circuit architectures by exploring and evaluating its own design strategies. In so doing, it learns to understand circuits, electromagnetics, and the close codesign they need to achieve the end-to-end design of RFIC.

Inverse Design for RFICs

To realize this capability, we proceeded in two stages. First, we developed a reinforcement-learning (RL) framework that determines the optimal system architecture, circuit topology, device parameters, and even the properties of the electromagnetic interfaces that connect different circuit elements. In this stage, the algorithm effectively defines how signals should propagate and interact across the system.

The algorithm trains very similarly to how a computer learns to play a game. If you let it play enough times, it can learn to play better by observing the relationship between the actions it took and the score it achieves. In a similar way, the RL agent here learns to design effective circuits by playing with a set of combinations, and over time, it can map the space between the circuit performance to its architecture, topology, and parameters. This training takes a few days to a week, but once trained, the agent can design circuits very quickly

The next step was to determine the physical structure of the IC’s electromagnetics—the plumbing—that can create the desired properties of the passive elements, which are characterized by a set of metrics called scattering parameters. These measure if a signal entering a component actually moves forward—or is reflecting backward, being wasted, as in our previous example with the fire hose and the garden hose.

Deriving the structure from the desired scattering parameters is an example of an approach called inverse design, which appears across many areas of engineering. In structural engineering, for example, one might collaborate with an architect on a physical goal—such as creating large interior spaces with high ceilings—and then determine the arrangement of arches or buttresses that can support it.

Generative AI for Electromagnetic Networks


Diagram linking S-parameter curves to classical, mazelike, and pixelated structures.

But RF integrated crcuits pose a particular challenge for inverse design: The process must account simultaneously for circuit behavior and the electromagnetic responses of the interconnects and passive elements that link them together. But it has to figure that out without doing a lot of artisanal iterating.

So we replaced our RF circuit simulator with an AI-based emulator. This AI model can predict the behavior of electromagnetic fields going through any structure—even totally arbitrary two-dimensional shapes—without having to compute the underlying physics from scratch, as simulation tools do. It would predict the solution of Maxwell’s equations and tell you the scattering parameters for any structure you showed it, without actually doing the math. With such an AI in hand, what a time-consuming electromagnetic solver normally takes minutes or hours to accomplish is reduced to milliseconds.

We chose to build our emulator around a convolutional neural network—a machine learning model that has been remarkably successful for image processing. Such networks can extract spatial features from any structure, and it turns out that the image of a structure contains a lot of spatial information that can accurately predict its electromagnetic performance. Then we trained it on a vast number of random pixelated structures whose scattering parameters had been labeled.

Once we had our inverse-design RL and suitable AI emulator, we essentially had an end-to-end AI designer. So we asked it to design us a power amplifier.

Unconventional RF Architectures

In 2023, we published this proof of concept—a power amplifier targeting the millimeter-wave band, specifically spanning 30 to 100 GHz, which covers most of the relevant 5G and radar frequencies. The final design achieved the best combination of wide bandwidth, output power, and efficiency then reported for a silicon-based power amplifier—meaning it could amplify a large amount of data across a wide swath of frequencies—while maintaining record efficiency.

The structure of the IC’s electromagnetic pathways was unlike anything any human would ever consider. Since the AI is not trained on human designs, the layout that emerged looked more like an arbitrary pattern or perhaps a QR code than the regular symmetrical structures we are used to seeing.

One unexpected insight revealed by this prototype, and our research generally, is that there’s no evidence that the templates we’ve historically relied on are even close to optimal for modern design goals. It’s not that a human designer can never come up with a better design. But with the removal of the templates and the time to synthesize cycle upon cycle of optimized circuits, it is now clear that AI-driven synthesis could break traditional design barriers and push the limits of RFIC capabilities.

Our 5G amplifier had only one input port and one output port. Adding more inputs and outputs to a design is not straightforward. Every port electromagnetically couples to every other port, so the scattering parameters quickly add up. Two ports give you four scattering parameters. Four ports, 16 scattering parameters. The math gets ugly fast. Could our model keep up?

We next trained our model on larger classes of electromagnetic structures with many input and output ports. In 2024, we published work showing that multiport integrated circuits are no problem for these AI algorithms either. Where previously multiport electromagnetic simulation required days or weeks of toil, this model evolved new structures in minutes. Since then, a plethora of work in the space by research communities across the globe have demonstrated the power of inverse design in RFIC.

Combining the reinforcement learning framework with the inverse design, we now had the ability to create an RFIC from specifications all the way to a fabrication-ready layout. We’ve so far shown this is true for RFICs ranging from low-noise amplifiers to subterahertz and broadband power amplifiers. The hope is that this will work just as well for other circuits.

Making AI Designs Interpretable

Our goal was to make RFIC design better and easier, but we didn’t want to make it beyond human understanding. Chip testing and debugging is a long, arduous process, sometimes even more so than design. Engineers often prefer ICs to have interpretable structures, so that if a problem crops up, they can understand how the chip works well enough to debug it.

To create structures that are more interpretable, we turned to diffusion models, which you may know from their remarkable ability to generate realistic images from text prompts.

AI-driven synthesis could break traditional design barriers and push the limits of RFIC capabilities.

Imagine you go to your favorite image-generation engine and ask it to create a painting of the sky in the style of Picasso, Van Gogh, or Michelangelo. You will get images that capture the essence of their brushstrokes, their use of colors, and their framing. All are pictures of the sky nonetheless, but in different styles.

Electromagnetic design is similar in that multiple structures can have very similar electromagnetic responses. Instead of using text input, we used scattering parameters as our input, and the electromagnetic structure of an RFIC chip as our output. As part of the inputs to the diffusion model, we created a dial that sets the spatial frequency of the final structure. By turning the dial, a designer can direct the model to synthesize structures with low (classical-looking and interpretable), medium (mazelike structures), or high (pixelated or arbitrarily-shaped) spatial frequency.

From prompts to output, the entire process took about 6 minutes. With this diffusion model, algorithms can now both discover novel architectures and accelerate the creation of conventional, so-called classical ones.

All an RFIC designer needs to do is specify virtually any valid set of scattering parameters. As long as they are physically realizable under Maxwell’s equations, the model pops out a corresponding structure as if it were a vending machine.

The Future of AI-Driven RFIC Design

The results of our investigations have drawn the attention of the RF community. The traditional bottom-up design process is clearly beginning to reverse.

But there are still questions: How generalizable are these methods? Can they consistently deliver truly high performance? Can we get to a place where AI produces designs that maximize every conceivable trade-off, holistically optimizing every parameter to its most ideal physical state? We want to take this strategy beyond RFIC design and invent other kinds of circuits that are different from anything humans have ever done.

These are exciting and ambitious prospects, but we are not there yet. AI can hallucinate a design that creates bad circuits that don’t work. This means verification methods need to remain under human oversight. And, while hallucinations are rare, it would still be good to reduce their occurrence.

History suggests that meeting these dreams of the future will take much more data than we’ve been using. Before the creation of the ImageNet repository—a repository of 14 million varied, human-annotated images—image-recognition models didn’t function well in the real world. The datasets they had been trained on were too tiny to be effective. ImageNet’s massive amounts of training data ushered in a revolution that led to AI that can generalize and recognize images in the wild. The rest was history.

If the goal for RFIC and analog design is a universal foundational model—something that learns the governing laws of electromagnetics and circuit behavior—then we also need data.

The good news is that this data is plentiful. Around the world, countless engineers at companies and academic labs simulate nearly identical RF circuits and passive structures every day. The bad news is that it’s all locked away behind nondisclosure agreements.

Open ecosystems have propelled other areas, and we think the RFIC community should do the same. There had been some movement toward this. Natcast, the operator of the U.S. CHIPS and Science Act’s R&D program, would have bolstered shared infrastructure and innovation for the next generation of wireless, sensing, and defense technologies. Unfortunately, both the organization and the program it ran specifically for machine learning and RFICs have been closed.

But the momentum Natcast’s effort sparked hasn’t died out. Building on our early work, groups across the community have already demonstrated remarkable advances. AI-driven IC design is part of a much broader technological shift. From biology and materials science to automotive and aerospace engineering, AI is reshaping how complex systems are conceived and optimized. Deeper collaboration between AI researchers and chip designers will unlock the field’s full potential. It’s by no means a foregone conclusion, but if we get this right, this genie won’t stay in its bottle.

Home Broadband Is 5G’s Surprise Killer App

2026-06-24 18:00:02



5G telecommunications, according to industry hype when 5G first launched in 2019, was going to be all about buzzy applications like mobile augmented reality and autonomous vehicles. But the surprise plot twist came when replacing home cable internet turned into 5G’s most widely adopted new application.

Fixed wireless access (FWA) now serves over 14 million U.S. customers, and contributes 28 percent of worldwide wireless traffic. Fixed wireless access is what the term sounds like: broadband internet delivered over a cellular radio link to a stationary location—no cable, no fiber, no trenching, no satellite broadband antenna pointed at the sky. What makes FWA distinctive is that it repurposes the same towers, spectrum, and 5G infrastructure that was built for mobile devices.

One U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) commissioner has called FWA 5G’s killer app. And that’s true not just in the United States either. Jio, India’s largest carrier, is also one of the world’s largest FWA providers, with over 9 million customers as of last year.

Carriers discovered they could repurpose surplus 5G capacity, while also exploiting a usage pattern quirk: mobile traffic starts to drop after 8 p.m., just when home internet usage peaks. The result is broadband, delivered via traditional cellphone towers, at a lower cost than fiber deployment. For these reasons FWA provides real price competition to cable broadband, while reaching underserved rural and suburban communities.

Fixed Wireless Access Repurposes Ambitious 5G Infrastructure

FWA is cheaper to deploy than fiber, and for most homes and small businesses, fiber’s gigabit speeds are overkill anyway. And since FWA uses the same wireless networks built for cellular service, FWA works anywhere that receives a steady cellular signal.

As cellular networks extend into rural and underserved areas, FWA’s coverage map expands with them. In these remote locales, the other main viable broadband alternative typically comes from satellite services like Starlink—which are, compared to FWA, more expensive, with higher delays, and lower bandwidth.

While most FWA deployments use currently underused microwave bands, some FWA deployments use electromagnetic spectrum that 5G launched but that mostly failed with mobile users. Millimeter waves operate at frequencies 10 to 40 times higher than 4G’s spectrum, offering high data rates from their wide available bandwidth.

However, there are good reasons 5G mobile users today don’t generally use millimeter wave spectrum. Millimeter waves can’t penetrate buildings. Plus, they lose signal strength within a kilometer or two of the transmitter. Millimeter wave antennas are also a real drain on cellphone batteries compared to microwave and radio wave tech.

Yet none of these challenges applies to a fixed station with a clear line of sight to a nearby tower. FWA home units (called customer premise equipment or CPEs) outperform 5G handsets by a significant margin. That’s mostly because of hardware. CPEs carry larger, more sensitive antennas than a typical cellphone, paired with more capable transceivers. CPEs also tend to be plugged into wall outlets, making battery concerns a non-issue.

Another 5G technology that did not gain traction in mobile wireless is Multi-User Multiple-Input Multiple-Output (MU-MIMO). A base station with MU-MIMO uses an array of antennas to serve multiple users on the same frequency simultaneously.

However, maintaining a MU-MIMO signal involves tracking each user individually—a problem that quickly becomes overwhelming with enough mobile users. FWA is different, however. Static CPEs, with their steadier downlink traffic loads, are an ideal match for MU-MIMO technology.

So, FWA internet service not only uses mostly fallow spectrum but also uses 5G spectrum more efficiently than do 5G mobile users—for whom, of course, these 5G technologies were originally designed!

How FWA Became 5G’s Surprise Killer App

Not long ago, the high-bandwidth use cases for 5G made for an impressive list: millisecond latency for autonomous vehicles, mobile augmented reality headsets with extensive high-speed data needs, and massive machine connectivity for an expanding internet of things (IoT).

These applications have all stalled. Autonomous vehicles pose challenging—and still unsolved—problems unrelated to spectrum allocation. Augmented and virtual reality technologies have yet to create meaningful spikes in bandwidth demand. And the IoT has, to date at least, fragmented across an array of competing standards.

Mobile carriers had built dense 5G networks for mobile customers whose needs rarely saturated the network’s capacity. Home broadband usage peaks in the evening hours, precisely when cellular networks are quietest.

FWA sits at cellular networks’ crossroads of supply and demand.

The Advent of 6G Will Only Expand FWA’s Reach

In December, the telecom standards body, the Third Generation Partnership Project (3GPP), issued its latest 5G specification—Release 20, the final “5G only” update. So, although 6G is still years away (its first specifications are expected in early 2029), engineering decisions that will define 6G are being made today. And FWA is not on the margins of that conversation; FWA is currently considered an established day-one use case.

6G wireless technology promises to expand FWA’s reach—not only via spectrum but also via geometry. Instead of following 4G and 5G’s connectivity model—strong signals near towers and weak signals far away—future 6G networks will let homes connect to multiple towers simultaneously, using a technology called distributed MIMO (multiple-input, multiple-output).

Where 5G’s version of MIMO (a.k.a. massive MIMO) concentrates user communication with dozens of antennas at a single tower, distributed MIMO uses antennas across multiple base stations and coordinates them to deliver signals to your home from multiple directions simultaneously.

The practical result: because no single tower is responsible for any given connection, the “edge” of a cell network—that outer boundary where signal strength falls off and service degrades—no longer represents a hard limit on who gets well served. A home that would once have been too distant from a tower, or blocked by terrain, could now be within reach of several base stations working together.

6G may eventually adopt distributed MIMO technology for mobile users, when synchronization challenges and other signal engineering hurdles are solved and deployed for real-world cellular networks. The jury, as of 2026, is still out on whether the full distributed MIMO problem will be solved once the 6G standards start to be set in place, within three years.

As demand for FWA grows, carriers will also deploy increasingly capable millimeter wave infrastructure for fixed customers first—the stationary CPE use case that millimeter wave best suits. The dense millimeter wave antenna infrastructure that FWA requires is the same infrastructure that future mobile applications will eventually inherit. AR glasses, AI-powered wearables, and other bandwidth-hungry applications originally promised for 5G are not canceledthey are waiting for the infrastructure to arrive.

The pathway to FWA is being prepared at lower frequencies, too. There is growing interest today in the largely unoccupied FR3 band, which spans roughly 7 to 24 gigahertz, situated between crowded low/mid-bands and the much higher millimeter wave frequencies.

Recent field trials by Nokia have demonstrated FR3’s viability for both cellular and FWA applications. FR3 is emerging as one of the more promising near-term frontiers for extending FWA coverage beyond its current footprint.

None of this was the plan. No carrier executive in 2020 stood on a stage and announced that 5G’s defining achievement would be delivering living room broadband to rural homes and suburban subdivisions underserved by cable.

FWA became 5G’s killer app because the engineering economics made it happen. Surplus wireless capacity met unmet consumer broadband demand, with the physics of a stationary receiver doing the rest.

That is not a criticism of the engineers or the carriers. It is simply how technology sometimes advances—sideways, through gaps nobody was trying to fill.

But FWA’s model of prioritizing unconnected users may in the end prove to be telecom’s on-ramp to everything else. Fix the digital divide first. Tomorrow’s sci-fi future appears set to follow close behind.

Why the U.S. Uses Only Half of Its Grid Capacity

2026-06-23 21:00:01



By most accounts, the United States appears poised to fall woefully short of meeting new electricity demand over the next five years as data centers and domestic manufacturing proliferate.

Ian Magruder


Ian Magruder is the founder of Utilize Coalition and previously served as director of market mobilization at Rewiring America, an affordable electrification advocacy group.

Building new power plants and transmission lines may seem like the obvious solution, but there are other options, says Ian Magruder, founder of Utilize Coalition, a nonprofit based in Washington, D.C. The U.S. uses only about half of its grid capacity, and a lot more power could be tapped by deploying a spate of newly available technologies.

Backed by Google, Tesla, HVAC systems manufacturer Carrier, and several other companies, Utilize Coalition advocates for more thorough use of grid capacity through policy change and new technologies. Magruder spoke with IEEE Spectrum about those efforts.

Why does the United States use only half of its grid?

Ian Magruder: Most studies have found that average utilization rates are between 40 and 55 percent across different geographies. And the reason is that we’ve built our grid to meet peak demand. We have to ensure that on the hottest summer day or the coldest winter morning we have enough power. But in many parts of the country, we really only hit peak a few days a year, and it’s really only a few specific hours within those days.

It didn’t used to be this way. What’s changed?

Magruder: Over the last 20 years we’ve seen the gap between average use and peak use grow wider. There are a variety of reasons for that. Grid operators have become more conservative following major blackouts and reliability events. And with more variable-generation sources such as wind and solar, grid operators are building in more capacity. But this also presents us with an incredible opportunity to get more out of the grid using new technologies.

What technologies are being deployed to address the problem?

Magruder: Pairing battery storage with energy generation is a key part of this, as are other kinds of distributed energy resources, like managed [electric vehicle] charging and smart thermostats. I would also say that transmission technologies that safely maximize the current in power lines, increase conductivity, and optimize power routes all play a critical role here. And then there’s demand flexibility, which is when utility customers adapt their power use to accommodate the grid during peak hours. Some really good work is being done around flexible data centers.

Is grid underutilization also happening elsewhere in the world?

Magruder: It’s a global phenomenon, but it varies widely by country. European grids face similar dynamics as [those in] the U.S., and in some places utilization is even lower. But Australia and the United Kingdom are further ahead in measuring and managing utilization with new technologies.

What’s the downside to overbuilding our grids?

Magruder: Mainly cost. Electricity rates have gone up, and we [at Utilize Coalition] think it’s because utilization has gone down. A report that we released earlier this year shows that a 10 percent increase in grid utilization could save Americans over US $100 billion over the next decade.

AI Is Learning to Read the Room

2026-06-23 20:00:01



Imagine sitting down at your desk and logging in for a performance review, with an AI system analyzing the conversation. You’ve been working long hours, balancing deadlines, and your manager asks how you’re doing. You say you’re fine, and maybe even smile, but there’s a hint of hesitation and your voice wavers. As you shift your posture, your shoulders slump.

These are subtle cues that to the human eye might hint at underlying stress. But to an AI model that’s been trained only to categorize emotions as “happy” or “sad,” such nuances are likely lost. It logs the words and a smile and moves on—and unless your human manager intervenes, the fact that you’re tired, unfocused, and maybe a couple of days from burnout never enters the equation.

Emotion AI,” which estimates how people feel based on facial expressions, voice tone, and behavior, seems to be suddenly everywhere; it’s being used in employee well-being and recruitment interviews, education platforms, and driver-monitoring systems. Technology call-center platforms such as NiCE and Genesys use AI to detect when a customer sounds frustrated and prompt agents in real time to slow down or respond with more empathy. Giant companies like Meta and startups such as Hume AI are developing more-expressive voice AI systems that can detect emotional cues in the person they’re “talking” to and adjust how they communicate.

What’s more, hundreds of companies already offer virtual AI companionship apps, a fast-growing market that may be worth an estimated US $555 billion by 2035—and robot buddies have also entered the picture. Intuition Robotics’s ElliQ, for example, is a small device vaguely resembling a white desk lamp that’s now being used to engage older adults in conversation in hopes of reducing loneliness.

But while the field of emotion AI is advancing at a rapid clip, most existing systems are focused on detecting a limited number of signals to label one specific emotion at a time—which is insufficient if you’re trying to understand the human condition. In the real world, human signals and emotions are contextual, overlapping, and constantly changing. A laugh can signal joy, nervousness, or both; a raised voice might signal enthusiasm just as easily as frustration. To make the job of emotion detection even more difficult, reactions differ greatly from one individual to the next, depending on demographics, cultural background, and countless other variables.

In other words, there’s a gap between what we’re expecting AI to pick up on and what AI can actually deliver. That’s the gap a new field of research—what we call human-context AI—is working to close. Instead of looking at just one input and labeling it, human-context AI increasingly has the capacity to take stock of an individual’s personality and character, and to track emotions in real time while combining multiple inputs, including facial dynamics, voice, tone, language, and behavior. Crucially, responses are also evaluated in the context of a specific environment, such as a performance review or professional coaching session. The result? Computers are learning to read the scene, rather than just the screen.

The Origins of Emotion AI

The story of emotion-sensing AI began almost three decades ago in the MIT Media Lab, where the American electrical engineer and computer scientist Rosalind Picard coined the term “affective computing.” Her work introduced the radical idea that computers could be taught to recognize and respond to human emotions.

Picard’s early experiments focused on single modalities: facial expressions, tone of voice, and physiological signals, such as skin conductance or heart rate. The goal was to give machines a window into human feeling, helping them become more empathetic. It was an exciting vision, but back then the science and hardware weren’t ready. Computing power was limited, sensors were crude, and datasets were narrow and biased.

Pixel art of three party-hatted figures in a box, each losing a slice of cake.Josie Norton

Over the next decades, researchers and companies got better at measuring the many ways in which humans express themselves. In the 2010s, sentiment analysis—the processing of large volumes of text to suss out emotional undertones—began to reach the mainstream. At the same time, marketing firms, including my company, Neurologyca, began using video and webcams to measure and catalogue customer reactions. Biometric devices and activity trackers, such as Fitbits and Apple watches, also became ubiquitous, generating new streams of data about people’s sleep, step counts, stress levels, and more.

Unsurprisingly, scientists soon confirmed that larger volumes of personalized data led to greater accuracy in reading human emotions. In 2019, researchers at Cornell demonstrated that combining multiple types of signals improves emotion sensing. Their system joined physiological data, such as brain activity measured by electroencephalography (EEG) and heart rate, with visual cues like facial expression, outperforming systems that relied on just one input. Around the same time, Picard and her team at MIT found that humanoid robots trained on data unique to a specific person were substantially better at reading that person’s reactions and feelings than robots acting without personalized data.

More recent studies align with these findings. In 2024, scientists in South Korea showed that fusing physiological, environmental, and personal data to recognize emotion resulted in a 32 percent error reduction. Another paper, published in 2025, demonstrated that user-specific information significantly enhances emotion recognition performance.

Today, our devices know who we are; our habits and tendencies, likes and dislikes. They’ve also gotten smaller and more efficient. Tiny, low-power cameras and microphones embedded in phones, laptops, and virtual-reality and augmented-reality devices can detect dozens of human signals simultaneously, from eye movements and micro-expressions to breathing rhythms, voice modulation, and posture. Advances in computing have also made it possible to integrate audio, video, biometric, and text data, often without even transmitting raw data to the cloud. And researchers at Stanford, Cambridge and MIT, and Kyoto University, in Japan, as well as the Software College of Northeastern University in Shenyang, China, are exploring how fusing such inputs can refine the sensitivity and accuracy of human-machine interactions.

And yet, despite so many breakthroughs, machines still can’t reliably interpret emotion or even physical stress. Just last year, a survey published in the Journal of Psychopathology and Clinical Science revealed that stress scores on smartwatches rarely, if ever, matched the level of stress that users were experiencing. In fact, a quarter of those surveyed reported feeling the direct opposite of what their smartwatches were reporting.

Why the disconnect? We’ve gotten very good at capturing signals, but not at interpreting them. A fitness tracker might infer from your heart rate that you’re stressed and recommend easing off training, but it doesn’t know if your increased heart rate is due to excitement, tiredness, or an extra cup of coffee. Gauging emotions in real-world settings is even more difficult. To solve this complex problem, machines need context.

From Neuromarketing to Emotion-Sensing AI

My company, Neurologyca, was founded in Spain in 2015, and started out in neuromarketing. Working with major European brands and conglomerates, our cofounder, Juan Graña, had realized that companies lacked solid data on consumers. At the time, most customer feedback came through surveys, which posed questions such as, “On a scale of 1 to 10, how joyful does this car advertisement make you feel?” or “Which emoji best describes your mood?” Naturally, these overly simplistic tools led to high levels of self-reporting bias, as people often misjudge or misstate their own reactions.

To get around this problem, Neurologyca set up labs, using neuroscience and cognitive science to more accurately capture human responses to products, logos, advertisements, and experiences. In addition to using biometric tools such as heart monitors, eye trackers, and EEG, we recorded millions of video frames of human reactions, logging each specific context and the resulting facial and bodily movements. To do this, we mapped over 790 points of reference, including corners of the mouth, size of the eyes and pupils, blink rate, and angling of the head. All of this data was collected and stored anonymously under strict European privacy standards.

Next, we paired this information with findings from decades of neuroscience and behavioral science studies on how biometrics, speech patterns, and human movement are related to emotion—research we continue to gather from academic institutions across Europe. We also created a database of situational contexts—for example, “watching a dog food commercial” or “hearing a new song”—and the human feelings they engendered.

In our work with companies, not only did this approach allow us to recognize nuanced emotions, it also let us identify which reactions indicated positive or negative outcomes. Take, for example, the context of horror-film trailers: Our research helped us figure out that the most successful elicit a very specific mix of emotions, namely a little bit of fear, a little bit of anxiety, but also some joy. With this knowledge, we could quickly rate viewer reactions to help a film company figure out how to tweak its trailer for the desired impact.

Colorful 3D blocks explain Neurologyca\u2019s behavioral, situational, and personal context layersNeurologyca

Within a few years, we discovered that a model trained on our database could accurately evaluate emotion using just a webcam. We stopped needing to host focus groups in rooms full of equipment. Instead, we were able to do such things as sending out a new perfume sample to paid participants around the world along with a link. When people opened the link, it turned on their cameras, allowing us to record their faces as they sniffed the perfume for the first time. Suddenly, we had expanded our reach: Rather than using small focus groups in one or two countries, we could quickly assess 1,000 people across the planet, comparing how someone in Japan, India, or Germany might feel about a certain product.

About four years ago, as AI was becoming pervasive, we realized that our models had applications well beyond neuromarketing. Importantly, these models are grounded in directly observed human behavior rather than inferred patterns or loosely labeled open datasets. Looking beyond brands and companies, we established that our model could be integrated into AI systems to help them understand human emotion at a much more granular level. In other words, we could provide a layer of context.

For Empathetic AI, Context Is Key

When we talk about “a layer of context,” we mean three different types of context. The first is situational or environmental context; for example, a performance review, a telemedicine session, or a horror-film viewing. The second is personal context, which includes an individual’s specific history, goals, and baseline state. The third is behavioral context, which covers the individual’s reaction over the course of the event or interaction by evaluating real-time changes in attention, confidence, engagement, and cognitive load.

Most systems today focus on only situational context, although some are starting to include personal context. Very few include behavioral context or combine all three in a meaningful way. What we’ve built at Neurologyca is a logic layer that fuses the three and translates them into structured, machine-readable information that allows AI systems and agents to respond more effectively. Our technology is being used to enhance systems in development, as well as some that have already been deployed, including driver-safety apps like Netradyne, home assistants like Amazon Alexa, and health-care AI platforms like Sully.ai.

It works as follows: Situational context is determined by the platform or application, be it a professional coaching session, a meditation app, or a driver’s safety monitor. Personal context already lives within each respective platform—or if not, it can be created through sharing of personal data or monitoring via camera. (Most wellness and professional-development apps, for example, contain each user’s profile, history, and prior sessions.) Last but not least, behavioral context is collected and analyzed in real time using our models. In the end, our logic layer fuses these three streams of information.

Our system doesn’t assign fixed weights to the three contexts. Instead, it provides a continuous calibration, with the balance shifting depending on the specific situation. For example, a pause in speech might signal uncertainty in a performance review, but something entirely different in a relaxation setting. If signals are ambiguous or overlapping, our system reflects that uncertainty through lower confidence scores rather than forcing a definitive interpretation.

What’s more, our system can work without ever sending raw data to the cloud, thereby easing privacy concerns. In many cases, video, audio, and biometric signals never leave the device. Instead, our lightweight models extract information locally and share only what’s necessary. Cloud systems, meanwhile, are used for training, pattern analysis, and model improvement. The result is a hybrid architecture: edge-based processing for speed and privacy combined with cloud-based learning for continuous improvement.

The result? By incorporating context, AI systems are beginning to interpret aspects of the human state as interactions unfold, dynamically adapting to emotions rather than reacting after the fact. The range of potential applications is broad and still evolving. Picture a professional-development platform that uses a human avatar to perform a mock interview and then provide feedback and tips on how to appear more confident, likeable, and well-informed. Or a meditation app that knows exactly how well you slept and how anxious you’re feeling, and can recommend an appropriate breathing meditation. Or a humanoid robot teacher that can tell when a student is confused or bored and step in to get them back on track.

Avoiding Potential Dangers on the Road Ahead

There have long been debates about the ethics of emotion-sensing AI. Some critics question whether systems should attempt to infer human feelings from external signals at all. They argue that reducing people to measurable outputs risks oversimplifying human experience while opening the door to manipulation, surveillance, and unfair judgments in workplaces, schools, and public spaces.

We take those risks extremely seriously. In fact, our technology aims to reduce the dangers of oversimplifying human emotion. Human-context AI is not based on the assumption that a machine can definitively know what someone is feeling. Rather, it is an attempt to move beyond simplistic labels by incorporating situational, personal, and behavioral context, while explicitly representing uncertainty when signals are ambiguous or incomplete.

That said, ethical concerns regarding implementation are real and have shaped the kinds of projects we pursue. We would never, for example, accept military engagements to help with interrogations. Not only for ethical reasons: Emotion AI cannot reliably detect deception, and claiming otherwise would be overstating what the technology can actually do. And while our technology can be used to gauge crowd behavior and predict things like when a football stadium is at risk of becoming destructively rowdy, we don’t want our technology deployed for surveillance. In short, we believe that using our logic layer on anyone who hasn’t opted in would be intrusive and ethically problematic.

In Europe, our systems are designed to comply with the EU AI Act’s restrictions on emotion recognition in workplaces and schools; as we expand into the United States, we apply jurisdiction-specific guidelines while maintaining the same core ethical commitments.

We also don’t advise companies to become overly reliant on our technology. Hiring and firing decisions should not be based on our outputs alone. Instead, our logic layer is designed to support human understanding and surface emotions that might otherwise go unnoticed.

Let’s return to the scenario of the performance review. Never mind basic AI—all humans, and even great managers, miss things during conversations. There’s a lot happening at once, as people process what’s being said, how to respond, and the greater context of the situation. These days, many exchanges also occur virtually or via video, adding more distractions while shared context is stripped away.

While we would never claim that our models understand humans better than their fellow humans, we believe we can offer an added layer to help managers capture and interpret behavioral signals that might otherwise get lost, providing greater visibility into how a conversation is unfolding.

Our model can track patterns moment to moment, picking up, for example, a shift in engagement, an instance when something didn’t land, or a change in how someone is behaving. The model won’t tell the manager what these moments mean or what to do about them; it simply makes them easier to see and follow up.

Human-context AI is at an early stage. The use cases, the adoption patterns, and the actual impact are all still evolving. At the same time, emotion-sensing systems are quickly being incorporated into real products and platforms. And without context—without knowing why people feel the way they do—AI risks misunderstanding us in critical moments.