Eight Carnegie Mellon Students Named SoftBank Group–Arm Fellows
By Adam Kohlhaas
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Eight Carnegie Mellon University Ph.D. students have received the SoftBank Group–Arm Fellowship to support research at the intersection of artificial intelligence and human collaboration.
“Carnegie Mellon is thankful for the support of SoftBank Group Corp. to fund the SoftBank Group–Arm Fellowship. These fellowships will empower students to harness AI to push scientific discoveries in fields like multimodal and multilingual learning, robotics, autonomy and life sciences,” said Martial Hebert, dean of CMU's School of Computer Science. “As part of the CMU and Keio partnership, the SoftBank Group–Arm Fellowship will catalyze transformative research and promote collaboration with industry to unlock the full potential of AI.”
The program builds on CMU’s ongoing relationship with Keio University in Japan, announced in 2024 as part of a $110 million effort to bring together universities, government and industry to advance AI research and innovation. The CMU–Keio partnership has explored embodied intelligence for home robotics, methods to reduce hallucinations in large language models and AI-driven approaches to biomedical discovery.
In May, SoftBank Group Corp. and Arm announced $15.5 million in funding to Carnegie Mellon to support the partnership with Keio, including the SoftBank Group–Arm Fellowship. The fellowship, funded by SoftBank Group Corp., covers tuition, fees, books, and research expenses such as travel and equipment, in addition to providing a stipend. Fellows are nominated by faculty and pursue projects in one of four focus areas: multimodal and multilingual learning, embodied AI for robotics, autonomous AI symbiosis with humans, and life sciences and AI for scientific discovery.
Embodied AI for Robotics


Autonomous AI Symbiosis With Humans


Multimodal and Multilingual Learning


Life Sciences and AI for Scientific Discovery


Yizhou Zhao, beginning a one-year fellowship in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering in the College of Engineering, explores how digital twins — high-fidelity virtual replicas of the physical world — can be automatically generated from videos. His research could transform lab automation and material science by enabling robots to build predictive models simply by observing experiments.