The project blends generative AI, Socratic dialogue, and immersive virtual reality, raising a harder question than novelty: how do you govern a therapeutic interface built for vulnerable users?
Virtual reality and social robotics can make learning and therapy feel more alive, but the harder question is whether that extra engagement translates into durable cognitive gains.
Extended reality is moving from pilots to clinical use in Europe, but the Italian problem is not the headset: it is the absence of a public strategy that can turn research into an industrial and healthcare system.
New research combines immersive tech and machine learning to catch dementia before it strikes.
Virtual reality therapies are breaking new ground, but can digital avatars replace real human connection?