XPANCEO, a pioneering deep-tech company in the realm of smart contact lenses, has introduced a transformative passive eye-tracking system that achieves industry-grade precision using only standard camera technology. Eschewing the need for active electronic components or power sources embedded within the contact lens itself, this innovative approach uses microscopic moiré patterns engineered into the lens to track subtle eye movements with remarkable accuracy. This breakthrough holds the potential to catalyze a paradigm shift in wearable eye-tracking technology by leveraging the optical characteristics of contact lenses as intrinsic markers detectable by widely available imaging devices.
At the core of XPANCEO’s innovation lies a sophisticated dual-layer nano-stripe pattern integrated into the contact lens surface, subdivided into four discrete sections arranged side-by-side. These sections consist of two ultra-thin optical gratings stacked with a minute microscopic gap. As the wearer’s eye moves and the angle of view changes relative to the camera, the gratings interact to produce shifting moiré interference patterns—dynamic optical illusions created by the superposition of repetitive structures. The relative movement and deformation of these patterns enable a passive, yet highly sensitive, mechanism to decode the precise orientation and motion of the eye. This novel biocompatible assembly, encapsulated within a thin silicone elastomer compatible with standard contact lens manufacturing, measures a mere 2.5 by 2.5 millimeters, underscoring its unobtrusive nature.
Traditional eye-tracking systems predominantly rely on active illumination, particularly infrared light, to stimulate reflective features on the corneal and crystalline lens surfaces. Conventional cameras then capture glint positions and pupil shapes that sophisticated computer vision algorithms process to compute gaze direction and eye orientation. This process, involving cyclic near-infrared illumination and imaging, demands considerable power consumption and frequently suffers degradation in environments with abundant ambient light. These limitations have historically confined high-precision eye tracking to specialized devices with constrained usability in everyday scenarios.
In stark contrast, the novel moiré-based contact lens technology circumvents the challenges of active illumination by functioning purely on optical geometry. The absence of infrared emitters simplifies hardware requirements immensely and allows seamless operation in bright environments where infrared signals often become overwhelmed by ambient lighting. This energy-efficient and camera-compatible system capitalizes on the ubiquitous presence of imaging technology embedded not only in personal devices like laptops and smartphones but also in sophisticated settings such as automotive dashboards and helmet-mounted displays. The universal compatibility promises extensive deployment possibilities without the need for bespoke tracking hardware.
Dr. Valentyn Volkov, XPANCEO’s Founder and Chief Technology Officer, emphasizes that this breakthrough introduces an unprecedented marriage between optical physics and wearable technology. By exploiting moiré interferometry principles, the team has crafted a method where eye orientation can be measured with impressive precision — about 0.3 degrees — without the complexity, energy demand, or discomfort associated with previous technologies. This capability unlocks new frontiers for contact lens platforms, particularly in contexts where users are frequently engaging with camera-equipped interfaces.
The clinical implications of such high-fidelity eye movement detection are particularly captivating. Eye-tracking has emerged as a critical biomarker in diagnosing and monitoring neurological conditions with subtle manifestations in ocular motility, such as Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s diseases. High-resolution, yet minimally invasive, tracking solutions capable of operating in everyday environments could facilitate earlier detection protocols and improve patient monitoring without relying on clinical equipment. This contact lens approach, by seamlessly integrating into the user’s daily life, holds promise for transforming neurodegenerative disease diagnostics via unobtrusive biometrics.
Beyond healthcare applications, the robustness of the moiré pattern tracking system makes it well-suited for deployment in demanding environments where monitoring operator alertness and cognitive state is vital. In fields such as aviation, automotive safety, and industrial labor, continuous tracking of micro-fixations and saccadic velocities can offer deeper insight than conventional fatigue assessments. The technology enables real-time detection of central nervous system fatigue, cognitive decline, or intoxication states, thereby ensuring that operators maintain optimal functionality and safety while performing critical tasks.
This contact lens technology elegantly sidesteps the energy and computational overhead challenges found in current active eye-tracking systems. By relying exclusively on passive optical interference effects and existing camera hardware, it dramatically lowers system complexity and power requirements. The encapsulated nano-stripe gratings create an optical signature that can be decoded efficiently by conventional image sensors using standard algorithms, facilitating integration with the vast ecosystem of consumer and professional devices already equipped with cameras.
Material considerations also receive significant attention. The encapsulation’s biocompatible silicone elastomer ensures wearer comfort and compatibility with current contact lens manufacturing. Maintaining such compatibility is crucial for scalability and market adoption, as manufacturing processes do not require major alterations. This seamless production integration paves the way for widespread availability without prohibitive costs, positioning the innovation as a practical solution rather than a niche prototype.
From a technical perspective, the dynamic interplay between the two nano-stripe gratings separated by a microscopically small gap is fundamental to moiré pattern evolution as viewed by the camera. The interference pattern shifts predictably with angular changes of the eye, essentially translating rotational motion into detectable optical signals. This sophisticated optical geometry leverages principles akin to mechanical pop-up books, where layered elements move relative to each other to create complex visual effects. Translating these movements into quantitative rotational data constitutes a notable advancement in wearable optical sensing.
The implications extend toward smart device ecosystems, where such passive eye-tracking lenses could foster new human-device interaction modalities. For example, laptops and smartphones could passively determine user gaze patterns and attentiveness without additional hardware investment or battery burden. Similarly, augmented and virtual reality headsets equipped with embedded cameras could enhance gaze-dependent rendering and interface control using solely the contact lens markers. This opens avenues not only for improved usability but also for energy savings and device miniaturization.
In conclusion, XPANCEO’s moiré-pattern eye-tracking contact lens embodies a cutting-edge convergence of photonic engineering, wearable technology, and biomedical sensing. Its passive, camera-readable design redefines the potential for high-accuracy gaze tracking, eliminating the bottlenecks of power consumption, environmental sensitivity, and hardware complexity that limit current systems. By opening new clinical, industrial, and consumer applications, this breakthrough stands poised to herald a new era in eye-tracking technology that is more accessible, reliable, and multifunctional.
Subject of Research: High-precision passive eye-tracking via moiré-patterned smart contact lenses
Article Title: Contact Lens with Moiré Patterns for High-Precision Eye Tracking
News Publication Date: 9-Jan-2026
Web References:
- https://www.xpanceo.com
- https://advanced.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/adfm.202522757
References: - Parkinson’s disease and eye-tracking biomarkers: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40309816/
- Alzheimer’s disease and ocular motor function: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12750316/
- Fatigue and cognitive impairment detection via eye movements: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33825234/ & https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20377146/
Image Credits: XPANCEO
Keywords
Electrooculography, Eye Tracking, Moiré Pattern, Smart Contact Lens, Passive Optical Sensing, Neurodegenerative Biomarkers, Wearable Technology
