Gurugram Student Develops AI-Powered Speech Device for People with Speech and Voice Difficulties
In a nation obsessed with ranks, cut-offs, and entrance examinations, where adolescence often feels like a relentless race toward the hallowed portals of the IITs, there occasionally emerges a young mind that dares to defy convention. Sixteen-year-old Pranet Khetan, a Class 11 student from Shiv Nadar School, Gurugram, is one such exception, a boy who chose not to compete for marks, but to communicate for humanity. Pranet was among four winners of Samsung Solve for Tomorrow 2025, where he developed Paraspeak, a simple device that records the user’s voice, sends it to a cloud-based AI model, and plays back a translated version in clear, fluent Hindi.

Samsung Solve for Tomorrow is the company’s flagship education programme that challenges young minds to identify real-world problems and develop solutions using technology. This year the pan-India tech contest had four themes–AI for a Safer, Smarter, and Inclusive Bharat; Future of Health, Hygiene, and Well-being in India; Environmental Sustainability via Technology; and Social Change through Sport and Tech. The four winning teams received a grant of ₹1 crore incubation support at IIT Delhi.
Pranet’s immediate goal is to scale Paraspeak, refine its accuracy, and collaborate with assistive-tech firms to bring it to hospitals and homes across India. He also hopes to expand its linguistic reach, developing similar databases for other Indian languages that remain invisible to most global AI systems.
“The idea began with a simple question,” Pranet recalls. “Why is there no device that can understand Hindi speech, especially when someone is struggling to articulate it?” That question, asked by a 16-year-old in the quiet hum of his school’s IT lab, would eventually lead to an invention that won him a place among the national winners of Samsung Solve for Tomorrow 2025.
The idea for Paraspeak took root in May 2024, when Pranet visited a paralysis care centre near New Delhi. There, he met patients who struggled to make themselves understood, stroke survivors, individuals with cerebral palsy, and those living with Parkinson’s disease. Over the next year, he immersed himself in the world of automatic speech recognition (ASR) systems. When he discovered that no major database existed for dysarthric Hindi speech, the kind produced by neurological disorders, he decided to build one himself.
“This became my custom dataset,” he explains. “I trained the AI model to interpret slurred Hindi speech in real time and reconstruct it into intelligible words. The first time I heard it work, it felt as though a voice had been given back to someone who had lost it.”
At an age when most of his peers are buried under the weight of coaching books, Pranet is building bridges, not metaphorical ones, but literal pathways of sound that connect the silenced with the world around them. His innovation, Paraspeak, is a matchbox-sized device powered by artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML), designed to help stroke and Parkinson’s patients speak clearly, even when their voices falter. Unlike most global speech-recognition systems, Paraspeak is trained in Hindi, making it one of the first of its kind in the world.
Armed with little more than a recorder, Pranet visited hospitals and rehabilitation centres, speaking to over thirty patients and collecting hours of voice samples. Each recording, he says, was a lesson not only in data but in dignity.