Helsinki, Finland Finnish eyewear company IXI has introduced a revolutionary pair of smart glasses equipped with electronically adjustable liquid crystal lenses, designed to automatically correct wearers’ vision dynamically. This innovation promises to replace multiple pairs of glasses worn for near- or distance-vision tasks, potentially transforming the global eyewear market as presbyopia and myopia increasingly affect populations worldwide.
Autofocus Eyewear: A New Era for Vision Correction
On a recent Zoom call, IXI’s CEO and co-founder Niko Eiden demonstrated the glasses, which look like conventional spectacles but house advanced technologies. The lenses incorporate liquid crystals whose orientation can be continuously controlled by an electrical field, allowing the optical power of the lenses to be instantly tuned. A built-in eye-tracking system monitors the wearer’s gaze and triggers the lens adjustment accordingly.
“These liquid crystals… we can rotate them with an electrical field,” said Eiden. “It’s totally, freely tuneable.” The ability to adjust the focus dynamically means a wearer no longer needs to switch between different glasses for seeing objects at varying distances.
IXI’s device aims to overcome the limitations of traditional bifocal and varifocal lenses, which rely on segmented or gradient prescriptions requiring wearers to move their gaze to specific lens areas for near or far vision. Instead, the autofocus lenses respond fluidly to changing visual demands in real-time.
Addressing a Growing Global Need
The timing of IXI’s innovation coincides with an escalating global need for adaptable vision solutions. According to the World Health Organization, presbyopia a condition impairing near vision typically onset after age 40 affects over 1 billion people globally, with numbers expected to increase as average life expectancy rises. Myopia, or short-sightedness, is also increasing sharply, driven by genetic and environmental factors, with nearly 30% of the world’s population affected and projections suggesting up to 50% by 2050.
Despite advances in other wearable technologies, eyeglasses have largely remained unchanged for decades, relying on static prescriptions that do not accommodate fluctuations in vision.
Technological Challenges and Consumer Acceptance
While promising, autofocus smart glasses face considerable technical and market hurdles. Early prototypes from IXI were reported to have issues such as “hazy” lens quality and distortion near the edges, according to Eiden, although newer models have shown significant improvements during trials where participants tested their ability to shift focus smoothly between different distances.
“The first lenses that we produced were horrible,” Eiden admitted candidly. “But newer versions have proved promising in tests.”
One critical component is the eye-tracking technology, which adjusts the lens based on gaze direction. Although the system can detect when a wearer is reading versus looking afar, Eiden noted that it does not pinpoint the exact object of focus, suggesting some inherent limitations in the early iterations.
Product design also factors heavily into consumer acceptance. “We need to make our products actually look like existing eyewear,” Eiden emphasized, highlighting the market’s historical rejection of conspicuous “cyborg”-like smart glasses, such as Google Glass.
Emilia Helin, IXI’s product director, explained that the frames are adjustable only within narrow limits due to delicate embedded electronics, a constraint that necessitates designing frame styles to fit a wide range of face shapes.
Battery Life and Pricing Considerations
The glasses integrate a small battery designed to last approximately two days, rechargeable overnight. Eiden did not confirm a launch date but suggested that an announcement may come later this year. Regarding price, he declined to verify speculation about a £1,000 ($1,200) price tag but smiled in response to the figure, hinting at a premium positioning.
Expert Perspectives on Autofocus Eyewear
Vision care professionals express cautious optimism about the technology but call for further validation.
Paramdeep Bilkhu, clinical adviser at the UK College of Optometrists, said, “Autofocus lenses could help people who struggle with varifocals or bifocals,” but cautioned that “there is insufficient evidence to state whether they perform as well as traditional options and whether they can be used for safety-critical tasks such as driving.”
Similarly, Professor Chi-Ho To of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University expressed concern about potential risks where delays or errors in lens adjustment could impact tasks requiring precision, such as surgery. “But I think in terms of general use, having something that allows autofocusing is a good idea,” he said.
Eiden acknowledged such risks, noting that IXI’s first-generation lenses adjust only part of the lens area, allowing wearers to glance outside the dynamic zone if desired. “If wholly self-adjusting lenses emerge then safety will become a much more serious business,” he remarked.
A Legacy of Adjustable Lens Innovation
IXI is not alone in this field. In 2013, UK firm Adlens introduced glasses allowing manual adjustment of optical power via a small dial that altered a fluid-filled membrane’s curvature inside the lenses. Rob Stevens, Adlens’ current CEO, reported that while the glasses were “well received by consumers,” they faced resistance from opticians, limiting sales.
Technology has evolved since, with several companies including both IXI and Adlens working towards fully automatic focusing lenses, although no commercial launch date has yet been confirmed.
Joshua Silver, an Oxford University physicist who founded Adlens, invented adjustable fluid-filled lenses in 1985 and has helped provide such vision solutions to roughly 100,000 people in 20 countries. He is now seeking investment to expand a venture called Vision aimed at broader distribution. However, Silver questions whether high-cost electronic autofocus glasses will gain significant market share compared to inexpensive reading glasses, which serve many of the same purposes.
Beyond Autofocus: Innovations in Myopia Control and Vision Enhancement
In addition to autofocus developments, research into slowing or reversing vision deterioration is advancing.
Professor Chi-Ho To developed lenses featuring a honeycomb-patterned ring that slightly defocuses peripheral light entering the eye a technique shown to slow myopia progression by up to 60%. These glasses are currently used in over 30 countries.
British startup SightGlass takes a related approach, engineering lenses that gently reduce image contrast to influence eye growth and reduce worsening short-sightedness.
“The ultimate goal,” Professor To explains, “is not just slowing myopia but actually reversing it slightly,” which could transform eye care for billions worldwide. “There is growing evidence that you can do it,” he said, describing the approach as a tantalizing prospect.
Outlook and Market Potential
As the global population ages and vision disorders rise, innovations like IXI’s autofocus glasses represent a compelling new frontier in personal eyewear technology. Balancing technical challenges, consumer acceptance, safety considerations, and cost will be key to mainstream adoption.
According to market analyst firm Grand View Research, the global eyewear market is projected to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 8% from 2023 to 2030, driven in part by digital innovations and increasing vision correction needs.
With major players entering the fold and growing scientific interest in not only correction but also prevention and reversal of eye conditions, the coming decade could see fundamental changes in how vision is managed worldwide.
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