Arm And SoftBank Contributing $15.5 Million To Advance AI With Carnegie Mellon And Keio

By Amit Chowdhry • May 18, 2025

Carnegie Mellon University (CMU), Arm, and SoftBank Group (SBG) announced that Arm and SBG will contribute $15.5 million to CMU to support its partnership with Keio University, a collaboration to accelerate the global advancement of AI.

A year ago, the US and Japan launched a research partnership to accelerate advancements in AI globally. And the partnership will bring the two countries closer together as international leaders in AI by pairing up CMU with Keio and, in a related effort, the University of Washington with the University of Tsukuba. And several global companies — including Amazon, Arm, Microsoft, NVIDIA and SBG — and a consortium of Japanese companies pledged $110 million in contributions to support these collaborations.

Arm and SBG will provide CMU with $15.5 million to support the university’s efforts in this partnership. This funding will give CMU scientists access to cutting-edge commercial tools and models and support fundamental research in areas where AI will have a transformative effect.

As a feature of the partnership, Arm will provide CMU researchers with access to its hardware and software IP and tools through the company’s Academic Access model, enabling researchers to innovate, evaluate, design, and manufacture with Arm’s latest technology. The company’s funding will also support research collaboration, capstone projects, internships, and other student experiences between CMU and Keio.

With its contribution, SBG will also establish the SoftBank Group–Arm Fellowship. This fellowship will support CMU’s Ph.D. students in AI research. The funding will also support student-focused academic programs, such as summer research opportunities for undergraduate students, capstone projects, and internships.

With support from Arm and SBG, researchers at CMU and Keio will embark on work in four main areas 1.) multimodal and multilingual learning, 2.) embodied AI for robotics, 3.) autonomous AI symbiosis with humans, and 4.) life sciences and AI for scientific discovery. The collaborations between CMU and Keio have started. And Researchers from Keio visited CMU in the fall of 2024. CMU researchers visited Keio in the spring of 2025.

For example, CMU and Keio researchers in a current project in embodied AI are developing systems that will enable robots to understand their abilities better, making them more effective at completing tasks around the home. And anticipated research in multimodal, multilingual learning will look at methods to reduce hallucination problems in large language models when used to analyze images or other multimodal data.

The projects in AI symbiosis could include research into understanding nonverbal communication, interaction with robotic arms, and social navigation. Researchers looking at the use of AI for scientific discovery will investigate AI-based experimentation and data analysis, including biomedical image analysis, lab automation, and AI-enabled interpretation of molecular measurements.

KEY QUOTES:

“Carnegie Mellon is thankful for the support of Arm and SoftBank Group Corp. to further the development of transformative technologies powered by artificial intelligence. AI is pushing scientific discovery in fields like robotics and biomedicine, helping researchers understand complex systems and predict outcomes with increased accuracy. The CMU and Keio partnership will unlock research potential across the globe. Together, with generous and expert industry backing, we will blaze the new path charted by pioneering breakthroughs made possible through AI.”

Martial Hebert, Dean, CMU’s School of Computer Science

“At Arm, we see the future of AI at the intersection of cutting-edge research, world-class engineering and practical application. Our partnership with the SoftBank Group and Carnegie Mellon University accelerates AI innovation while empowering the next generation. By uniting academia and industry, we’re not just advancing technology, we’re also investing in its future architects.”

Khaled Benkrid, Senior Director, Education and Research, Arm

“AI’s true potential emerges at the nexus of diverse ideas, rigorous scholarship and strategic international alliances. Through our support for the Carnegie Mellon–Keio initiative, we seek not only to catalyze innovation but also to strengthen the foundational bonds between Japan and the U.S., building a robust pipeline of visionary AI talent prepared for global leadership.”

Tim Mackey, Corporate Officer, CLO & GCO, Head of Legal Unit of SoftBank Group