Roybi, the maker of a pill-shaped robot to teach language and math skills to young children, has acquired additional technology to power its educational features.
The Mountain View, Calif.-based company has acquired the KidSense artificial intelligence engine developed by Kadho. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.
Based in Irvine, Calif., Kadho has spent the past five years developing the KidSense engine, which recognizes children’s speech and is based on speech and voice data from about 150,000 children, according to Roybi CEO Elnaz Sarraf. Developed with experts in language development, the technology covers languages including English, Mandarin and Korean. It can also account for regional dialects, she claims.
The KidSense engine will play a critical role in how children interact with Roybi’s robots, which respond to kids by verbal communication. The acquisition will hasten Roybi’s path to creating assessments on how kids pronounce words and master vocabulary, Sarraf adds.
“It’s not something you can build quickly,” says Sarraf. “It requires a lot of data and a lot of time.”