- CrossSense AI smart glasses gain recognition as funding pours into dementia support tools
- The $1.4 million price tag reflects a growing reliance on technology in cognitive care strategies
- Early results suggest benefits, but long-term clinical efficacy has yet to be confirmed
The Longitude Prize for Dementia has awarded £1 million (about $1.4 million) to a smart glasses system designed to support people living with dementia.
Supported by the Alzheimer’s Society and Innovate UK, the prize is a major incentive for practical innovation rather than theoretical research.
The winning system, CrossSense, introduces an AI assistant embedded in smart glasses that observes the environment and provides prompts during daily activities.
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Smart glasses and an adaptive AI assistant
The assistant, called Wispy, learns user habits over time and adjusts its guidance as cognitive decline progresses.
According to its developers, the assistant supports routine tasks like preparing food, managing household chores, and navigating social interactions — it “sees what you see, hears what you hear, and can talk to you.”
The goal is to improve user experience and reduce confusion while preserving autonomy, although this is highly dependent on consistent user engagement and accurate interpretation of context.
“Winning the Longitude Award for Dementia is a dream come true. As a small team with big ambitions, the award’s support has accelerated CrossSense in ways that would not have been possible otherwise,” said Szczepan Orlins, CEO, CrossSense Ltd.
“The technology is designed to support everyday life and integrate multiple senses to simplify essential tasks… This win brings us closer to making CrossSense available to the public within the next year.”
Early observations conducted with the University of Sussex suggest some improvements in object recognition, memory usage and spatial awareness among users.
The system also tries to reinforce cognitive connections between objects and actions, which developers claim can slow the decline of early dementia.
However, these findings remain limited in scope and have yet to be supported by large-scale longitudinal studies.
“CrossSense captures exactly the kind of revolutionary AI that the Longitude Prize set out to support,” said Dame Wendy Hall, internationally recognized AI expert and Chair of the Longitude Committee.
“The team’s progress over the past three years has been remarkable… The award has helped accelerate more solutions that will soon be available.”
Dementia continues to expand globally, with no cure currently available, emphasizing supportive technologies rather than treatment.
CrossSense adapts to this shift and focuses on daily functionality rather than medical intervention.
“Rapid advances in artificial intelligence will enable people affected by early-stage dementia to stay safely in their own homes for longer and live more independent, fulfilled lives,” said Professor Fiona Carragher, Chief Policy and Research Officer at the Alzheimer’s Society.
“The CrossSense smart glasses companion is an excellent example of leveraging technology to develop intuitive personal support that complements care provided by humans.”
The UK government is proud of CrossSense’s work and recognizes dementia as a “terrible condition that affects millions of people and their loved ones in all parts of the UK.”
“CrossSense’s work will help people living with dementia to live more independent lives with confidence. Its work is a brilliant example of how UK-led research can deliver real and life-changing benefits,” said Lord Vallance, UK Science Secretary.
While the recognition and funding signal confidence in AI-assisted care, questions remain about long-term adoption, data privacy, and measurable outcomes beyond controlled settings.
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