5 teams win finalist award to continue work in dementia technology

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5 teams win finalist award to continue work in dementia technology

8 October 2024

Our Five finalists have now been selected and will share £1.5m to develop their solutions in pursuit of the £1m first prize to be awarded in early 2026.

State of the art AI glasses to help people with dementia navigate their environment and a smartwatch that learns daily routines are among five groundbreaking technologies awarded £300,000 as a finalist in the £4.4m Longitude Prize on Dementia. 

The prize is rewarding the creation of new assistive technologies that use AI to transform how people live with dementia after a diagnosis so that they can maintain their independence for as long as possible. 

The global challenge prize announced in early 2022, funded by Alzheimer’s Society and Innovate UK and delivered by Challenge Works (part of Nesta), is driving the creation of personalised, technology-based tools that are co-created with people living with the early stages of dementia, helping them to live independent, fulfilled lives so they are able to do the things they enjoy. One in three people born in the UK today will develop dementia in their lifetime, with around a million people in the UK living with a form of dementia now. This is projected to rise to 1.4 million people by 2040.

24 semi-finalist teams were chosen in June 2023 and we’re now so excited to reveal the final five teams that have been selected as finalists. The five teams, who were announced on Tuesday 8th October on BBC One’s The One Show, will each receive £300,000 to develop their technologies in the next 15 months.

Meet the five finalists

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CrossSense

Animorph, UK

High-tech glasses that help users recognise objects and people.
The technology helps people living with dementia to recognise objects and people and remember what to say or do to improve memory recall. This will help them to carry out daily activities independently, such as making a cup of tea or greeting a loved one. The glasses, which also work with existing prescriptions, aim to delay the progression of memory loss and use synaesthesia – associating senses such as sights and sounds.

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Theora 360

Clairvoyant Networks Inc, USA

Smartwatch to predict and prevent falls using football pitch sensor technology.
Existing ‘fall’ technology can only inform caregivers once an accident has happened, this groundbreaking update will use the technology that maps how a football moves on a pitch (Ultra Wideband) to establish when falls are likely to happen and ultimately prevent them. This tech, in the form of a smartwatch designed for older people, could anticipate slips at certain points in a daily routine (e.g. before bed) or in certain locations (e.g. the bathroom). By detecting and calculating fall risk, the tech could limit risk of hospital admission which can speed dementia symptom progression.

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AUTONOMOUS

Associação Fraunhofer Portugal Research, Portugal

A smartwatch-based app to provide guidance on daily routines.
This AI software processes data from a smartwatch and sensors around the home to learn about its users’ activities and gently guide them on their routines, reminding them of actions they may have forgotten through personalised cues such as illustrations (eg an open fridge or running tap), text, audio and vibrations. If they are not responsive, it will alert a carer. The software will become more intensive as a person’s dementia progresses, helping them to stay in their own home and community for longer.

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Supersense Technologies

Supersense Technologies, UK

At-home monitoring-box that protects privacy.
When a loved one is in the early stages of dementia and is still able to live independently, family members can sometimes worry about their wellbeing. This ‘sensor’ box and automated messaging system scans rooms to help remotely inform family members of the loved one’s wellbeing via Whatsapp or text message (e.g. your mum is up and about and the heating came on at the usual time this morning). This provides reassurance for both family member and user, but unlike existing monitoring technology, doesn’t use cameras or wearables, connecting caregivers without infringing on privacy.

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Memory Aid

The MARCS Institute at Western Sydney University and Deakin University’s Applied AI Institute, Australia

Home assistance device resembling a traditional telephone.
This familiar-looking device offers a screen for video calls which can also display personalised reminders of daily activities. The phone connects users to a reassuring voice-recording of their choice that shares prompts on daily activities and displays images of items in that person’s house. It also makes video-calling loved ones as easy as picking up the phone, to empower people living with dementia to do things they love that bring meaning.

Dementia’s impact

“Currently, around one million people in the UK live with dementia,” explains Kate Lee, CEO of Alzheimer’s Society. “A figure projected to rise to 1.4 million by 2040. AI presents exciting opportunities to help those with dementia stay active and independent, to enable them to remain in their own homes for as long as possible. By harnessing the power of technology, we can support memory recall and assist individuals in maintaining their daily routines. The five finalists of the Longitude Prize on Dementia are tackling these challenges in innovative and diverse ways. I look forward to seeing how their technologies evolve over the next year.”

Stella Peace, interim Executive Chair, for Innovate UK adds: “Dementia’s impact is devastating for those who develop the condition and for their loved ones. There is much we can do to ensure that those with dementia continue to live fulfilling lives. Technology has a great role to play and the projects for which we have announced funding today have the potential to truly change lives for the better.”

“This announcement proves the critical role that innovation, and challenge prizes, have to play in helping to solve some of the biggest challenges of our time”

The prize

“The Longitude Prize on Dementia was launched to help meet the urgent need for intuitive, AI technologies that could support independent living for people with dementia,” explains Tris Dyson, Managing Director at Challenge Works. “Last year we saw some incredible ideas come through the 24 semi-finalist entries and it was a challenge for the judges to select the five finalists announced today. This announcement proves the critical role innovation, and challenge prizes, have to play in helping to solve some of the biggest challenges of our time.”

In addition to the financial reward, non-financial support will provide crucial insight and expertise until the end of 2025. The support includes access to potential product users, mentorship, and expert advice on technical and business aspects of the innovation, to ensure products are scalable. It will also facilitate knowledge sharing between participants. All teams will be working with people with lived experience to ensure solutions are fully co-created. 

In early 2026, one winner will receive a prize pot of £1 million. This will follow a judging process with the international Judging Panel and Lived Experience Advisory Panel.

The prize has been funded by Alzheimer’s Society and Innovate UK – the UK’s innovation agency. See all of our partners here.

 

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