Assistive Tech for Autism That Transforms Daily Life

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Entrepreneur of over 35 years and caregiver of adult autistic son

Look, I’ll be the first to admit I’m impatient with technology. If something doesn’t work right away, I throw a fit like my 6-year-old granddaughter when she’s begging for another stuffed animal (she already has 200, by the way). But here’s the deal: if I can figure out this assistive tech for autism stuff, you definitely can too.

I’m the parent of a profoundly autistic adult son named Michael, and I’ve stumbled onto three technologies that are seriously changing the game for us. The third one? It might actually blow your mind.

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Key Points:

  • AI tools are transforming autism care with smart cameras, voice assistants, and personalized video therapy.
  • Assistive tech brings peace of mind, safety, and independence to families of autistic children and adults.
  • OpenAI’s Sora 2 creates lifelike videos that help autistic individuals learn new skills faster.

Finding Time to Learn While Caregiving

Two men stand beside book covers titled NeuroTribes by Steve Silberman and From Struggle to Strength by Harry Psaros, both focused on autism and neurodiversity.

Let me start with something simple. When I’m with Michael, I need to be fully present—I can’t just tune out and dive into a book. But when he’s happily engaged at his computer, playing games or solving puzzles, I get these small windows of time where I can sneak in a bit of reading.

That’s where the Kindle Scribe comes in. It’s about 300 bucks on Amazon, and it’s basically a Kindle with a little pencil so you can take notes while you read. I’ve been reading NeuroTribes by Steve Silberman and From Struggle to Strength by Harry Psaros and being able to take down notes right there on the page makes such a difference. It’s not fancy assistive tech for autism, but it helps me stay on top of things even when life is chaotic.

Smart Home Cameras That Actually Get It

Comparison of Google Gemini and Amazon Alexa smart home devices, featuring smart displays, speakers, and thermostats on split backgrounds.

Now this is where things get really interesting. Amazon and Google just announced some major upgrades to their smart home systems Alexa Plus and Google’s Gemini and honestly, this could be huge for families like ours.

There was an article in The Wall Street Journal this week by Nicole Nguyen and Wilson Rothman about how AI is renovating smart homes, and when I read it, I immediately thought about all the ways this could help us.

What These Cameras Can Do Now

You know those Ring or Nest cameras a lot of us already have? They just got way smarter with AI. Now you can actually ask them questions about what happened during the day, and they’ll find it for you automatically.

Like, I can ask “When did Michael’s attendant show up today?” while I’m out getting groceries. Or if I notice Michael has a skinned knee, I can say “Show me when my son fell on the front porch” and the system finds that exact moment. No more scrolling through hours of boring footage.

But it gets better. The cameras can now tell you what’s happening in real time. Mine can alert me when Michael opens the refrigerator (which he does constantly because he loves food). Or if someone left the front door open after they left. It’s like having someone watching who actually understands what they’re seeing. That’s the kind of assistive tech for autism that actually makes a real difference.

What’s Coming Soon

A person holds a smartphone showing a missing pet alert with a photo of a dog and a camera video asking to verify if it’s a match.

Some features aren’t quite here yet, but they’re coming and they sound amazing. The cameras will be able to recognize specific people. So I could get a notification if Michael’s in the bathroom messing with the faucets again – he’s obsessed with water and will turn them on and just leave them running.

Michael has seizures too and if we miss one, that’s obviously a big problem. Having the camera alert us would be incredible. Same thing if grandma takes him outside and maybe needs some help.

But here’s the one that really got me excited: Amazon’s Search Party feature. Right now it’s for finding lost dogs, but Amazon is working on expanding it to people like seniors with dementia who wander off. Think about what this means for our kids who elope. If Michael somehow gets out of the house, we could tap into cameras throughout the neighborhood to help find him. That’s not just convenient assistive tech for autism that could literally save his life.

Making Your Home Work for You

Smart home gadgets including smart displays, speakers, and security cameras shown managing home automation and video monitoring for family safety.

Setting up routines used to be such a pain. You’d have to mess around with complicated apps and hope you did it right. Now you just tell Alexa or Google what you want. “Turn off all the lights at 10 PM.” or “Lock the doors at bedtime.”

The systems can even learn your patterns. They figure out when people are usually home and adjust the temperature, the lights, even what music plays. If Michael comes home after a rough day, the system could automatically put on his favorite calming music because it’s learned what he likes.

And because these things are so much smarter now, I can ask complicated questions. Like if I see Michael’s iPad in a weird spot on the floor, I can ask “Did my son have a meltdown today?” and it’ll show me the video clip plus what happened right before and right after. That’s gold when you’re working with therapists and trying to figure out behavior triggers. This is assistive tech for autism that actually helps us understand what’s going on.

Whether Michael is home or at our local respite house (J13 here in Austin), this gives me real peace of mind. The cameras can give me a daily summary of what happened, who came and went. What deliveries showed up all without me having to constantly check in.

This Video AI Tool Is Going to Change Therapy

Man sitting on a couch holding a tablet showing himself making a bed, likely using an augmented reality or smart camera app.

Okay, this is the big one. This is the assistive tech for autism breakthroughs that I think could revolutionize how our kids learn.

We’ve been working for months on creating AI videos where Michael can watch himself doing things he hasn’t learned yet. The idea is based on video modeling and showing him himself succeeding at something. Michael loves watching himself, so we figured this would really work.

How We’ve Been Doing It

The process is actually pretty simple. You take a few photos of your child with your phone and record some audio. Even if your child is nonverbal like Michael, you just record whatever sounds or words they have. The AI can create a voice that sounds like them. We’re talking maybe a minute or two of audio and a handful of photos.

We’ve been using tools called Eleven Labs and HeyGen to create videos of Michael saying words he’s never said. The videos are 100% AI. Michael never held his iPad that way, never waved like that, never said those words. But it looks and sounds exactly like him. So now he can watch himself succeeding at something he’s still working on.

Then Sora 2 Came Along

Blue cloud-shaped mascot with starry eyes beside the text “SORA 2 BY OPENAI” on a purple gradient background.

Making these videos has been really time-consuming and honestly kind of complicated. But OpenAI just released Sora 2, their new text-to-video tool, and it changes everything about assistive tech for autism therapy.

Once you’ve got those photos and audio recordings, you just type in what you want to see and Sora 2 creates a video of your kid doing it. It looks exactly like them. You seriously cannot tell it’s AI-generated.

Think about what this means. Speech therapy where Michael can watch himself saying words he hasn’t mastered- in his own voice. Occupational therapy where he can see himself doing fine motor tasks. Physical therapy, recreational activities, job training, all of it. This assistive tech for autism works across everything.

Here’s a Real Example

Michael will not put a fitted sheet on a bed correctly. He just won’t do it. We’ve tried, caregivers have tried, nobody can get him to understand how to pull that sheet over the corner of the mattress.

Now imagine he watches a video of himself doing it perfectly. He sees himself succeed, hears people cheering and clapping for him in the background. He watches it over and over. That’s completely different from watching some stranger on YouTube do it or even watching a caregiver do it. He’s watching himself.

We’re on the waitlist for Sora 2 right now. One of our tech guys got in this morning and we’re dying to see what he discovers. But I really think this is going to be a game-changer for assistive tech for autism across speech, occupational therapy, physical therapy, recreational therapy, vocational training, life skills and all of it.

This Is Just the Beginning

We’re really at a special moment here. The assistive tech for autism we can get our hands on right now isn’t just about making life a little easier. It’s about fundamentally changing how we support our loved ones with autism and intellectual disabilities.

AI cameras that keep our kids safe and give us peace of mind. Voice assistants that make our homes actually work the way we need them to. Therapy tools that let our kids watch themselves succeed. This is the stuff that changes lives.

And we’re just getting started. These tools are going to keep getting better and smarter. Yes, there’ll be glitches. Not everything will work perfectly right away. But the direction we’re heading is clear toward a future where technology opens up possibilities we couldn’t even imagine a few years ago.

You Don’t Need to Be a Tech Expert

Here’s the good news: You don’t need much to get started with this assistive tech for autism. A smartphone and some basic smart home devices. You might already have an Alexa or Google Echo. A lot of older devices work with the new AI features and if they don’t, the new ones aren’t crazy expensive.

If you’re dealing with the same challenges every single day, this technology should give you hope. More independence for our kids. More peace of mind for us. Better ways to learn and grow. A better quality of life all around.

The world of assistive tech for autism is getting better fast and it’s getting more accessible. Whether you’re a parent like me, a sibling or a caregiver. These tools can make a real difference.

Give your kid a big hug today. And just as important do something nice for yourself too. You’ve earned it.

Transcription:

Mike Carr (00:04):

So I tend to be a bozo when it comes to patients that is, I am not a patient person when I try new tech, that doesn’t work quickly and easily. I tend to scream and really throw a tantrum, sort of like my 6-year-old granddaughter when she wants a new stuffy and she already has 200 stuffy, so I’m not going to give her another stuffy. And that’s sort of how I act when New Tech doesn’t work for me, not the most adult behavior. However, if I can figure out how to use it, you probably can too. So today I want to talk about the right technology combined with the right support and how it can make our lives so much better for ourselves and for our special need kiddos. And I’ve got three things I’m going to cover today and I promise that the last of the three things might actually blow your mind because it certainly blew mine.

(00:52):

So first I’ll quickly tell you about my newest reading companion and then we’ll dive into some amazing AI powered home assistance features that could give you a real peace of mind. And finally, I want to talk about Sora two, which is open AI’s new text to video tool, which is pretty darn cool and it has the potential, I think to revolutionize therapy for our kiddos. So let’s go ahead and jump in. So my new reading buddy is the Kindle Scribe. Now this is not New Tech, but it lets me do something quickly and easily when I’m on Day of Duty. And of course I always pay attention to my son every second that I’m on my dad duty. But if he’s at the computer playing his video games or doing his puzzles, then I can take my little Kindle scribe and it’s got a little pencil kind of thing and I can actually take notes as I’m reading a Kindle book.

(01:41):

And of course I read Kindle books on autism and things related to that, which are really helpful. And it’s just amazing, right? It’s compact, it’s easy, and it lets me make some progress. So two books I’m reading right now, neuro Tribes by Steve Silberman and from Struggle to Strength by Harry Psaros. And both books are pretty interesting, at least so far. I’m not through all of them, but I’ve started both of them. And of course when I’m on dad duty and paying attention to my son, I can’t really read. But when I’m not paying attention to my son, then I get to play with my Kindle Strip. So highly recommend it’s about 300 bucks on Amazon. The real game changer. Number two is the new announcements from Amazon and from Gemini. And this is where things get really interesting. The Wall Street Journal, earlier this week, Nicole Nguyen and Wilson Rothman, the two writers of the article talked about smart homes getting an AI renovation and what they’re describing could be transformative for families, hopefully your family and my family too.

(02:38):

So I’m talking about Alexa Plus and Google’s Gemini for home and they’re getting a whole lot smarter and the features they now have can keep our kids safer and actually can give us more peace of mind, which we all know we need when we’re the son or a daughter that’s profoundly autistic or has complex special needs. So let me paint a picture of what’s already possible. So remember those ring or nest cameras that you might have around your house. They just got a major AI upgrades. This is AI stuff and I love tech. I love the sparkly new things even though I didn’t have a lot of patience for those things. I love to sort of take a look at ’em. But AI can now do using the footage that was on your nest or ring camera is it can go through hours of footage automatically and you can ask it specific questions and it can find what you’re interested in.

(03:27):

So you can ask the question like, when did my child’s attendant arrive today? Because you were out doing grocery shopping, you just want to make sure they showed up on time, right? Or you notice something on your son has skinned their knee and you say, okay, show me when my son fell down on the front porch and skinned his knee. And the system will scan through that day’s video, find that exact moment and show you the clip. And it gets even better than that. Cameras can now give you real time updates about what’s actually happening. So your camera might tell you, your son just opened the refrigerator, which our son loves to do to see what’s in there and of course eat all kinds of things that he’s not supposed to eat. Or it can alert you that the front door was left open after the caregiver leaves and forgot to turn on the automatic smart locks and the door locked automatically after five seconds or whatever.

(04:12):

It’s like having an extra set of eyes that actually understands what it’s seeing. Pretty darn cool. Now, there are some features that aren’t quite out there yet, but I just have to mention these because they really sound pretty neat. Cameras are going to be able to start recognize specific people. Now imagine this, your camera can now recognize who it’s looking at so you can get an alert if your child’s in the bathroom playing with the faucets again, which our son loves to do. He’s fascinated with water. And so he’ll turn the faucets on, he’ll leave them, he’ll drink out of the faucets. I’d like to know that that’s going on. Well, guess what? The cameras can now do this. Pretty cool. Our son also has seizures and man, if we’re not paying attention and he has a seizure, we’d certainly like to get alert to that effect.

(04:53):

Or when grandma takes him outside to play in the yard, like to be able to know what’s going on. Does grandma need any help? That kind of stuff. But my personal favorite, this is really amazing, is Amazon’s new search party feature. Now it’s initially launching to help find escape dogs and the way it works, it accesses multiple cameras throughout the neighborhood. But here’s the exciting part, Amazon is working to extend this feature, not to dogs, but to people like seniors with dementia who wander around or think about what this can mean for your adult child that elopes or leaves home unexpectedly, the door was unlocked and they snuck out of the house and you know where they are. So you’re freaking out and all of a sudden you can use this network of cameras throughout the neighborhood to help find your child. That’s not just convenient, that could literally be lifesaving.

(05:43):

Now another breakthrough is how much easier it is to create helpful routines. No more wrestling with complicated apps. You just tell Alexa plus or the Google Gemini at home system what you want and it sets up everything automatically. You want all the lights off at 10:00 PM you tell it, turn all the lights off at 10:00 PM sets the alarm, takes care of it, and your lights have to be all hooked into this thing. But assuming they are, that’s pretty darn cool. Or need to make sure your doors are locked at bedtime. You tell it once and the system can do that for you. Or it can even learn your family’s patterns like when specific people are usually home and it can automatically adjust as a result of that temperature and lighting and even put on your son’s favorite music as he’s walking in the door and he’s had a tough day and you want to sort of calm him down.

(06:29):

Alexa or Google Echo can sort of learn that from your son’s playlist, what he plays at home and adjusted accordingly. And because these AI assistant are so much smarter, now you can ask it even complex questions. Did my son have a temper tantrum today and throw his iPad across the room? You notice the iPad was in the corner because I wonder how it got there, not where it normally is. So the system will not only find the relevant clips, it can show you the incident and it can show you what happened before and what happened afterwards. What was the antecedent to the behavior? Why all of a sudden did he get really upset? Why did he throw the iPad across the room? And then what happened afterwards? Now, not all this is going to work perfectly right off the bat, but it will improve over time.

(07:17):

And as a parent of a profoundly autistic son, I can certainly see how this technology could be a real game changer for us and probably for you guys too. So whether Michael’s at home or spending a night at respite house with our J13.org here in Austin, Texas, we have that peace of mind and that comfort because the cameras can help us pay attention when even we’re not there and they can give us daily highlight summaries. Things like what did go on the day, what were the highlights of the day, what deliveries did show up, who delivered them. I mean, just whatever it is that you’re interested in. A lot of this can happen without you being on top of it and worrying about it every minute of every day. Now, the third thing I want to talk about, which I mentioned already, which to me is actually the coolest of all three is Sora.

(07:59):

Two, this could really be revolutionary for us and perhaps for you two, if your son or daughter is going through any kind of therapy right now, we’ve been working on for months something that we thought would be really pretty cool and we were using AI generated realistic avatars that allow our son to watch himself performing a skill he hasn’t yet mastered. The way this works is you take a few pictures of your child with your smartphone and you record some audio. Now if your son or daughter’s nonverbal, just whatever words they might have, if they have any words at all, you record them. And AI can mimic and come up with a voice that sounds like they would sound if they have a full set of vocabulary. And that’s pretty cool. So now we’re talking about, and you don’t have to spend a lot a minute or two of recordings or just a few pictures, get this to work.

(08:46):

So we did this for Michael and we were using tools from Eleven Labs and we also used something called Hagen. And we created a video of our son saying words he hasn’t yet mastered. So lemme show you a quick example. Take a look at this quick video sleep ball. And what you just saw is completely AI generated. Michael never held his iPad that way or waved it like he did in that video, and he never said the word that he was saying in that video. But now he can learn by watching and hearing himself in his own voice saying something he hasn’t mastered yet. Now producing these videos has been very time consuming and pretty complicated. But here’s where Soah two comes in and changes everything. Once you’ve taken those few pictures and you recorded some audio, you can simply give to a text prompt of whatever you want it to do and it creates a short video of your son or daughter and it looks like your son or daughter, right?

(09:44):

It recreates the image of them. You cannot tell the difference doing something they’ve never done before. So think about all the applications. This is like visual modeling through self recognition. We know Michael loves to watch himself and if he can watch himself like in speech therapy saying words he hasn’t yet mastered and he’s, he’s looking at himself saying these words in his own voice, pretty darn cool. So it could work for occupational therapy, it could work for physical therapy, it can show your child doing things actually activities they haven’t yet mastered, like recreational therapy, maybe dribbling a basketball, vocational training, even life skills. So here’s an example. Our son never will pull the fitted sheet over the edge of the bed. He just won’t do it. And so colleagues and caregivers will work with him forever and he just can’t figure this out. So how cool would it be if he watches himself now actually putting the fitted sheet over the right way and he gets all the cheering and applause and clapping in the background and he watches himself over and over again doing something that he himself hasn’t yet mastered.

(10:52):

So that’s pretty darn cool. Right now we’re on the waiting list restore too. So we haven’t actually tried this yet, although one of our tech guys evidently got on this morning. So we’re super excited about what he is going to be able to discover, but we think this is going to be a game changer. We think it’s going to work across all kinds of therapies. So think about speech therapy, learning how to talk better occupational therapy, fine motor, motor skills, the gross motor skills, vocational skills on the job training where he’s watched himself do some things on the job out in the real world that he hasn’t mastered. Recreational therapy, learning how to dribble that basketball or play on that Special Olympics team, whatever that skill is. So this is a pretty bright future and this stuff is not that expensive and I don’t think it’s going to be that complicated.

(11:34):

As I said, I have the patience of a nett and zero patience. I think we’re standing at a really special moment. The technology we have access to today isn’t just about convenience or novelty. We’re talking about tools that can gently transform how we care for and support our special needs kiddos from AI powered cameras to give us peace of mind and help keep our kids safe to voice assistance that make our homes work the way we need them to. Revolutionary therapy tools, let our children see themselves succeeding. Now, this is the kind of innovation that can change lives. And what excites me most is that we’re just at the beginning. These tools will only get better. They’re only going to get smarter and more helpful. Yeah, there are going to be some bumps. Not everything’s going to work perfectly at first, but I think the trajectory is clear, right?

(12:19):

It’s pointing toward a future where technology just doesn’t make things easier. It opens up possibilities we never imagined. And all it takes is a smartphone and some fairly inexpensive devices like you might already have an Alexa or an Echo at home. And a lot of these are compatible with some of this new AI stuff. And if they’re not, the new devices aren’t super expensive. So I don’t think it’s going to be cost prohibitive. So if you face challenges like some of the ones I’ve described every day like we do, this text should give you hope. It means more independence for our kids. It means more peace of mind for us, better learning opportunities, ongoing training, ongoing learning forever, alright, growth and learning, and ultimately a better quality of life for everyone. So thanks for watching and be sure and give your kiddo a big hug today. And just as importantly, do something special for yourself. Have a good rest of your week. See you.

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