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CrossSense AI glasses won £1 million for technology to help people with dementia

CrossSense smart glasses with AI assistant Wispy won £1 million in a UK technology competition aimed at people with dementia. A built-in camera, microphone…

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CrossSense AI glasses won £1 million for technology to help people with dementia
Source: Guardian. Collage: Hamidun News.
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British developers of the CrossSense technology have received a £1 million award for smart glasses with an AI assistant that helps people with dementia manage everyday tasks. The device is planned to launch in early 2027.

How the AI Assistant Wispy Works

CrossSense is software built into smart glasses with a thick black frame. Inside the frame are a camera, microphone, and speakers. An AI assistant named Wispy manages everything: a talkative, patient assistant that requires no special knowledge from the user. Wispy constantly analyzes the surroundings. The camera detects faces, objects, and text. The microphone picks up questions and conversations. When the system understands that a person needs help, it takes action: it provides voice guidance or displays text directly in front of the eyes as a floating caption. The key principle is that the glasses themselves notice the moment when help is needed. No need to press buttons, open an app, or formulate a question. Just wear them.

  • Camera recognizes faces, packages, and road signs in real time
  • Microphone picks up speech and ambient sounds
  • Wispy responds by voice — conversationally, without jargon
  • Floating text before the eyes duplicates voice prompts
  • The device does not look like a medical device — an important factor for users

Why This Matters Right Now

Dementia is one of the biggest challenges of an aging population. More than 55 million people worldwide live with this diagnosis. In Britain alone, there are about 900 thousand, and another 160 thousand are added each year.

The disease is incurable, but its consequences can be partially compensated. The illness deprives people of the ability to do familiar things: make tea, find keys, remember the names of loved ones, read medication instructions. Most existing technical solutions — smartphones, smart speakers, GPS trackers — require the user to understand how to use them themselves.

For a person with dementia, this is often impossible. CrossSense changes the logic: instead of waiting for a request, the glasses initiate help themselves. This is a fundamentally different model — not "tool on demand," but "proactive assistant."

Research shows that the ability to remain independent longer reduces anxiety in both patients and their caregivers. This directly affects the quality of life for the entire family and reduces the burden on the healthcare system.

When and How It Will Appear on the Market

CrossSense is scheduled to launch in early 2027. Winning the competition with a £1 million prize is not just recognition: the money will go toward accelerating clinical trials and obtaining regulatory approvals, without which a medical device cannot enter the market. The distribution model remains open. Will CrossSense be available through the NHS as part of state assistance? Or will it have to be purchased independently? Pricing in this category is a critically important question: the device is valuable only if it is accessible to those who need it. The competition itself was established specifically to stimulate innovation in dementia assistance. The prize amount reflects the scale of the problem and the willingness to fund real solutions.

What This Means

AI assistants are going beyond screens — now they are built into objects that a person simply puts on and forgets about the technology. For people with dementia, for the elderly, and for everyone who needs constant support, this is not a gadget, but a tool of independence. CrossSense sets a new standard for the wearable AI category in healthcare.

ZK
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