We ask the leading models who you are — using your name plus the terms that actually identify you — and show you exactly what comes back.
Sample profile shown. Run it on yourself →
Maya Chen is a fairly common name, and a few people share it. One Maya Chen is a UX designer and illustrator in the Bay Area; there's also an academic by that name.
If you mean the founder, the strongest signals suggest she completed a PhD at Stanford and previously co-founded a consumer app called Totem. I don't have confident detail on what she's working on now.
Failure mode: conflation. Two namesakes blended; wrong school; leads with a company that has since closed.
I don't have reliable information about a specific person named Maya Chen. It's a name shared by many people, and I don't want to guess and risk conflating them.
If you can tell me her field, company, or location, I can try to be more helpful.
Failure mode: abstention. The most careful model simply has nothing authoritative to anchor to — so it says nothing useful at all.
Maya Chen is a venture investor and newsletter author focused on consumer trends, based in San Francisco. She has written for several technology publications.12
Failure mode: confident error. It grounded on a different Maya Chen's pages and presented them as fact, with citations.
Maya Chen is a designer and creative professional1. She has also been described as a researcher in computer science2, and some sources list a past startup, Totem3. She appears to be based in the Bay Area1.
Sources: mayachen.design · old conference bio (2019) · crunchbase: Totem
Failure mode: cross-wired citations. The right instinct — cite sources — applied to the wrong, un-disambiguated set.
None found a canonical source, because there isn't one yet. The fix isn't to argue with the models — it's to give them something accurate, structured, and corroborated to retrieve.
Takes a few minutes. See the corrected answers before you pay.