Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Virtual Reality
  4. News

Patent suggests Microsoft’s next HoloLens could tell where you’re looking

Add as a preferred source on Google

If a patent filing recently uncovered by MSPoweruser is to be believed, Microsoft is at least considering the possibility of eye-tracking tech for head-mounted displays (HMDs). This technology, which uses “wave guides” to track infrared-lit peepers, is an attempt at mitigating some of the compatibility issues experienced with prescription eyewear.

The most painless way eye-tracking is performed is by affixing a camera to the frame of the HMD. Unfortunately, that requires that at least part of your view is hampered by the rig itself. Otherwise, the only other commonly adopted means of eye-tracking is with the help of a partial reflector bending the camera’s line of sight directly to your temple.

Recommended Videos

While this aids in avoiding a curbed view, it doesn’t fare well for users who wear glasses. Theoretically, Microsoft’s patent would remedy this problem, utilizing a transparent wave guide composed of both an input coupler and an output coupler for all the heavy lifting.

Within the patent, Microsoft details a markedly high-level overview of how this all works:

“Certain embodiments described herein relate to a waveguide that is for use in tracking an eye that is illuminated by infrared light. Such a waveguide, which can be used in a head mounted display (HMD), but is not limited for use therewith, is transparent and includes an input-coupler and an output-coupler.

The input-coupler comprises a grating area, formed by plurality of curved grating lines, that diffract light beams incident on the input-coupler into the waveguide and towards a common region at which is located the output-coupler. The curved grating lines of the input-coupler have a radially varying pitch.”

The patent summary goes on to describe how the infrared beams work in conjunction with the curved grating lines of the input coupler, the convergence point of which houses the output coupler, to produce an eye-tracking effect.

It’s all very advanced stuff, but it’s clear that even though this technology isn’t present in HoloLens as we know it, Microsoft is no doubt attracted to the idea.

At any rate, we’ll most likely get a taste of a similar eye-tracking tech at CES next month. SensoMotoric Instruments, a tastemaker in eye-tracking gadgetry, is slated to demo its latest products for HMD devices in the coming weeks.

Gabe Carey
A freelancer for Digital Trends, Gabe Carey has been covering the intersection of video games and technology since he was 16…
AI tools that help students cheat are multiplying, and the detectors can’t keep up
A New York Times report has found that cheating tools are evolving faster than the software meant to catch AI writing.
GPTZero website on a laptop

A wave of new apps marketed on TikTok and YouTube is making it nearly impossible for teachers to tell whether students are actually writing their own homework or offloading it to AI. The New York Times reports that tools known as humanizers and autotypers have closed the gap that used to give AI-written homework away, and that the same companies selling detection software are sometimes the ones helping students get around it.

The tools work around the checks teachers rely on

Read more
This monstrous ASUS gaming laptop costs as much as three new MacBook Pros
Asus’ flagship gaming laptop is back, bigger, brighter, and wildly expensive.
ASUS ROG Strix Scar 18 Computex 2026

Following up on the ROG Strix Scar 18 (2025)'s impressive act, ASUS has built a successor that looks even more ridiculous if you glance at the spec sheet. The ROG Strix Scar 18 (2026) is not a cute little café laptop. The flagship gaming machine is built around a large 18-inch 4K miniLED display and hardware that embarrasses most desktop PCs.

But all of this comes at a cost, and you might want to sit down for this one.

Read more
ASUS fanboys can now spend $16,578 on its 20th anniversary gaming gear
ASUS ROG Family Bucket Collector’s Edition Featured

ASUS’ Republic of Gamers brand is celebrating its 20th anniversary by bringing a five-figure collection of its coolest gaming hardware. The company just revealed pricing for its ROG 20th Anniversary Family Bucket Collector’s Edition, a monster bundle that costs 112,026 yuan, or roughly $16,578. The collection is apparently selling through an offline flash sale in Shanghai from June 20 to July 19, with buyers being selected through a lottery system.

This is more than your typical PC upgrade. ASUS is selling you the whole ROG lifestyle starter pack, which will attract collectors after their next limited edition bundle.

Read more