Syntiant the pioneer of low-power edge AI devices which acquired Knowles’ microphone and vibration sensors business in 2024, will exhibit a suite of intelligent sensor and AI-enabled technologies at Sensors Converge 2025, June 24–26 at the Santa Clara Convention Center. The company will also host a series of demonstrations, spotlighting innovations from its AI and sensor business units, including new microphones embedded with the company’s neural processors.
One of the highlights from Syntiant at the Sensors Converge 2025 event will be a new high performance range of miniaturized digital microphones. Syntiant’s new SPV Digital microphone delivers high-quality audio capture in a space-efficient footprint previously limited to analog mics. According to the Irvine, CA-based company, this performance-to-size advantage enables consumer electronic brands to offer more application features in devices like wearables, hearables and smart glasses. With 1.2V I/O support for battery-sensitive designs, the new SPV Digital mic serves the growing shift toward fully digital audio architectures for improved system performance.
Built on a combination of Syntiant’s ultra-low-power Neural Decision Processors and high-performance microphones, a new AI-powered environmental noise cancellation (AI-ENC) solution delivers crystal-clear voice capture and aggressive noise suppression for TWS earbuds, smart glasses, headsets and collar mics, as well as for smart home devices, such as video doorbells. The AI-ENC demo at Sensors Converge is featured on an NDP120 evaluation kit and TWS prototype.
And designed for smart home, automotive and commercial applications, Syntiant will showcase a new highly efficient security solution that leverages its ML models and sensors to detect ambient motion or human presence in real time at under 10mW. Upon detection, the system instantly activates high-resolution cameras to begin recording, preserving energy while improving real-time incident capture.
“We’re redefining what a microphone can do by embedding AI directly into the signal chain,” says Kurt Busch, CEO of Syntiant, who was recently named a finalist for “Executive of the Year” at this year’s Best of Sensors Awards. “Our ultra-small, ultra-efficient sensor solutions aren’t just capturing sound, they’re enabling new classes of intelligent devices that can listen, see, feel, respond, and adapt in real time, all without a cloud-connection and at a fraction of the power.”
Kurt Busch will also serve on an industry panel titled, “From tinyML to the Edge of AI: Connecting AI to the Real World,” on Thursday, June 26 at 1pm at Sensors Converge. The session will explore the latest advancements in on-device learning, edge computing architectures and the practical deployment of AI on resource-constrained devices.
www.sensorsconverge.com
www.syntiant.com
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