Is baby hungry, sleepy or just unhappy? These Japanese apps help interpret cries
—·6h
Crying without a clear reason can be a major source of anxiety for parents. As families look for new ways to navigate the uncertainty of early childcare, Japanese developers are rolling out AI-powered tools designed to identify the possible causes of a baby’s distress. One of them is Babylingual, a free app released in March by Moto Numazawa, a 25-year-old father in the Kanagawa prefecture city of Chigasaki, near Tokyo. In late April, Numazawa held his smartphone up to his three-month-old son,..
TickersAIChannelsstocksCountrieschina, asia, japanCategoriesai-tech
Open original source ↗Published
6/12/2026, 6:44:58 AM
Fetched
6/12/2026, 9:07:48 AM
Confidence
60 / 100
Relevance
37 / 100
Trust
—
Language
en