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Main Authors: Tussa, Yonatan, Heredia, Andy
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.06564
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author Tussa, Yonatan
Heredia, Andy
author_facet Tussa, Yonatan
Heredia, Andy
contents Wearable AI is often designed as always-available, yet continuous availability can conflict with how people work and socialize, creating discomfort around privacy, disruption, and unclear system boundaries. This paper explores episodic use of wearable AI, where assistance is intentionally invoked for short periods of focused activity and set aside when no longer needed, with a form factor that reflects this paradigm of wearing and taking off a device between sessions. We present The Pen, an ear-worn device resembling a pen, for episodic, situated cognitive assistance. The device supports short, on-demand assistance sessions using voice and visual context, with clear start/end boundaries and local processing. We report findings from an exploratory study showing how layered activation boundaries shape users' sense of agency, cognitive flow, and social comfort.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_06564
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle The Pen: Episodic Cognitive Assistance via an Ear-Worn Interface
Tussa, Yonatan
Heredia, Andy
Human-Computer Interaction
Wearable AI is often designed as always-available, yet continuous availability can conflict with how people work and socialize, creating discomfort around privacy, disruption, and unclear system boundaries. This paper explores episodic use of wearable AI, where assistance is intentionally invoked for short periods of focused activity and set aside when no longer needed, with a form factor that reflects this paradigm of wearing and taking off a device between sessions. We present The Pen, an ear-worn device resembling a pen, for episodic, situated cognitive assistance. The device supports short, on-demand assistance sessions using voice and visual context, with clear start/end boundaries and local processing. We report findings from an exploratory study showing how layered activation boundaries shape users' sense of agency, cognitive flow, and social comfort.
title The Pen: Episodic Cognitive Assistance via an Ear-Worn Interface
topic Human-Computer Interaction
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.06564