XPANCEO, a deep-tech company evolving smart contact lenses, has disclosed a passive eye-tracking system that attains industry-level measurements clarity using popular cameras. The system employs microscopic patterns embedded in contact lenses that allow high-accuracy passive gaze tracking without needing active electronics or dedicated power sources.
This technology permits contact lenses to role as optical markers that can be read by using existing cameras in laptops, car dashboards, mobile, and helmet-established systems. The system makes use of 2-ultra-thin optical gratings that forms interrupt patterns that shift as the eye rotates.
As the eye rotates and the viewing angle changes, the gratings (detached by a microscopic gap) shift associated to each other, just like how layers in a pop-up book change position when tilted. This causes the so-called as moiré styles to go through a measurable transformation. The monitoring module measures 2.5 × 2.5-millimeters and is encapsulated in a biocompatible silicone elastomer, like minded with traditional contact lens production processes.
Presently eye-tracking technologies basically depends upon external systems and work by shining infrared light onto the eye and using cameras to capture the reflection styles from the cornea and on sometimes the crystalline lens.

Computer vision algorithms then evaluate these images via calculating corresponding gaze direction and processing the relative positions of a multiple of glints and the shape and position of the pupil. This non-stop cycle of illumination, imaging, and evaluation takes place dozens of times per second.
These structures drain batteries highly fast and experience in decreased overall performance in difficult lighting conditions, including properly-lit environments wherein infrared alerts compete with the ambient light.
How the passive pattern system works
The latest pattern-based technology gives two main benefits. First, the streamline setup removes the requirement for infrared illumination and works reliably in well-lit environments, reducing hardware complexity and power consumption.
Second, it permits universal deployment. Since cameras are already embedded in normal devices and environments, the passive monitoring system functions throughout more than one contexts without needing committed infrastructure.
The studies has been posted in Advanced Functional Materials.
“This moiré sample method offers correct eye orientation measurement using optical geometry without including complexity or energy needs to the lens,” stated Dr. Valentyn Volkov, Founder and CTO of XPANCEO.
“The technology expands the capability applications of contact lens platforms, mainly in environments where customers are already connecting with camera-ready devices.”
Medical and high-risk environment uses
This unique 0.3-diploma clarity, without the need for restrictive clinical hardware, makes the system a promising technique to come across detect subtle eye movements in clinical applications, together with the study of patterns related to neurological conditions. Such high-fidelity eye-tracking is increasingly identified as a important biomarker for the early diagnosis of neurodegenerative conditions, inclusive of Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s diseases, with current studies organizing precise protocols for analysis.
Moreover, the system’s robustness makes it highly adaptable to excessive and high-stakes environments. In automobile, aerospace, or industrial settings, in which customers often wear helmets with embedded cameras, the continuous evaluation of saccadic velocity and micro-fixations goes far beyond standard fatigue tracking.
It permits the actual-time detection of excessive principal frightened device fatigue, cognitive impairment, or intoxication, ensuring that operators are fully capable of acting their obligations.
This generation expands the programs of smart contact lenses with out growing the system complexity.











