As artificial intelligence (A.I.) continues to penetrate nearly every industry and aspect of our everyday lives, ECPs and optical retailers are taking a hard look at the technology, and they appear to be in various stages of implementing it into their business models and strategies. It also appears that A.I. is ready to permeate the optical industry as well, with the promise of more efficient processes that can benefit both providers and patients/consumers.
While A.I. is proliferating across many industries, many C-suite executives are moving forward cautiously with its adoption. Some cite security concerns, and others point to the unreliability of A.I. systems that can generate wildly inaccurate information. A recent example that made headlines is Google’s experimental A.I. Overviews search tool that the company withdrew for further development after it advised some users to use glue to make cheese stick to pizza better and said geologists recommend people eat a rock every day.
According to a new survey, conducted by Teradata by NewtonX, seven in 10 business executives said their A.I. strategy is not fully aligned with their business strategy, while 61% said they fully trust the reliability and validity of their A.I. outputs. Meanwhile, 40% of the survey’s respondents do not believe their company’s data is ready to achieve accurate outcomes.
Despite these issues, a growing number of optical businesses, including frame and lens manufacturers, wholesalers and retailers are employing A.I. for a variety of tasks, and with good results. Eye care professionals are also beginning to reap the benefits of A.I., with ECPs employing the technology for such tasks as targeted marketing campaigns, sales training, patient education, and for transcribing patient conversations.
“The benefits of using A.I. are paying off for Elite Eye Care,” Haley Perry, OD, owner of Elite Eye Care in Arden, N.C., told Vision Monday. “I have seen a substantial boost in productivity. A.I. allows me to spend less time on routine tasks such as charting and data analysis, giving me more time to focus on higher value activities.”
Back in March at the VM Summit, Samantha Jordan, head of computing and technology at the Future Today Institute, posed this question to the crowd of optical industry leaders, “Are you optimistic about the future of artificial intelligence (A.I.)?” John Whyte, MD, MPH, WebMD’s chief medical officer, discussed with VM Summit attendees how patients are learning to trust chatbots, how doctors are integrating generative A.I. into their practices, the need for transparency and other practical aspects of A.I. implementation. Dr. Whyte said, “A.I. is a work in progress, and we have just started to scratch the surface of how we can use A.I. to improve health care and vision care outcomes.”
Vision Monday reached out to ECPs, optical retailers, eyewear companies, and contact lens companies to find out how they are applying A.I. in their businesses. The “potential of A.I.” was mentioned frequently, with some companies taking a more cautious approach to A.I. with concerns over security and privacy at the forefront. And, of course, meeting the needs of ECPs and patients emerged as the ultimate goal.
National Vision, one of the largest optical retailers in the U.S., recently announced a Series A preferred investment along with Topcon Healthcare in Toku Inc., a leader in applying A.I.-powered diagnostic and screening tools to retinal imaging. The investment round allows Toku to accelerate the development of technologies that use A.I. to analyze retinal images for biometric markers linked to overall health and risk of cardiovascular events, stroke, and diabetes.
To maximize market access, Toku applies its technology to leading retinal cameras. Topcon Healthcare Inc. also recently announced a partnership with Microsoft Corporation to deliver A.I.-powered ‘Healthcare from the Eye’ solutions to improve health care access, cost and quality, the company said.
National Vision also announced that it had set up an A.I. Council composed of key business and technology leaders last year to ensure the company was embracing this new technology. The key goals of this council are to drive awareness, catalog ongoing initiatives, and identify new business opportunities enabled by A.I., while providing a level of governance across the organization, according to National Vision. “For National Vision, one of the greatest opportunities we see for A.I. is in the exam lane,” Priti Patel, OD, National Vision’s chief medical officer, told Vision Monday.
“We’re looking at ways to use A.I. that will enhance the impact of a routine eye exam on patients’ overall health and well-being, and we’re investing in developing tools that can make life-improving care more affordable and accessible to more people. Eyewear companies, contact lens companies, and optical lens and equipment manufacturers provided Vision Monday with an overview of how they are currently using A.I., giving us a glimpse into the future of what may be on the horizon, and the concerns they have over the budding technology. Here’s what they had to say:
A.I. Campaigns Bring Eyewear to Another World
One of the benefits of using A.I. in a creative setting is that it can transport us to places we cannot go on our own, such as another planet, or even the very depths of our own minds. Some eyewear companies have experimented with A.I. in campaigns to showcase eyewear in extraordinary locations, including Etnia Barcelona with its recent Underwater campaign.
Created for the brand’s 22-piece Spring/Summer 2024 collection, Etnia Barcelona’s Underwater campaign transports viewers to a surreal underwater universe, recreating a world that is populated by mythical and mystical beings such as mermaids — all of whom wear Etnia Barcelona eyewear. Campaigns such as this help make eyewear the focus of something genuinely extraordinary, alluring and never-before seen, carving a new frontier for the world of eyewear.
According to Etnia Barcelona about the campaign, “Once again, the Barcelona-based brand’s campaign is an exercise in creativity, experimentation, and attention to detail… Moreover, Underwater is a universe created through artificial intelligence. An artificial intelligence that, however, moves us away from a cold and robotic image to bring us closer to a world where technology merges with nature to create a magical and harmonious environment, respecting every detail… Etnia Barcelona’s new campaign invites us to explore the mysteries of the underwater world while reflecting on the coexistence of human creativity with artificial intelligence to create a surprising world.”
Similarly, Washington, D.C.-based optical shop Georgetown Optician explored the limits of A.I. to craft a campaign that showcases the breadth of its in-store collection. In Spring 2023, Georgetown Optician partnered with Design Army to create “Adventures in A-EYE,” an experimental ad campaign made entirely with A.I. and focused on the story of futuristic travelers visiting a fictional planet.
The campaign spans collections: Georgetown Optician’s offering of brands such as Jacques Marie Mage, Anne et Valentin, Cartier, Mykita, Kirk and Kirk, Garrett Leight, and more are carefully curated throughout. Georgetown Optician’s Pierce Voorthuis explained to Vision Monday in 2023, “The power of the story is that we can take the campaign to new worlds that line up with entirely fresh themes. The imagination really is the limit on where we go next… We want our followers to get a full flavor of our offerings, but we also want them to be emboldened and inspired by our unique offerings. We focus on eyewear that sparks that imagination.”
About the campaign, he said, “Exploring the creativity of eyewear is one of our founding passions. Adventures in A-EYE showcases some of our most exciting and innovative products and marries it with a brand-new way of storytelling through A.I.-generated landscapes and models. Georgetown Optician has always been about presenting our customers with some of the most unique eyewear from around the world, this campaign continues to tell that story using our most imaginative technique yet.”
Design Army, a D.C.-based design agency, created the campaign in collaboration with Georgetown Optician. Pum Lefebure, co-founder and chief creative officer of Design Army, discussed what it’s like to work with A.I. in a creative sector, saying, “I love that this is a new beginning of creative possibilities! And I’m proud that — in working with A.I. — we never lost our sense of creativity and craft. We didn’t let A.I. control us. The project itself is a journey for Design Army.”
When used alongside artists and creatives to enhance the beauty and design of eyewear, A.I. campaigns can offer a fresh perspective — one that, perhaps, we might not have reached on our own. ClearVision was an early experimenter and researcher of A.I. in the eyewear space, and the company said it continues to use it across many of its departments. For ClearVision, applications of A.I. include 3D printing, internal app development, development for technical products, processing improvement courses, and Python coding courses, among others. On a day-to-day basis, employees use A.I. such as ChatGPT as a planning tool for email campaigns, drafts and organizing data, or Mem to take and summarize meeting notes, the company told VM. The HR department also makes use of A.I., employing it to assist with writing and editing handbook policies, editing job descriptions, writing communications and award applications, generating unique interview questions, creating game outlines for training sessions, organizing lists and more. ClearVision said its sales team used A.I. assistance to create a training workshop for CE credits that matches face shapes to frames using A.I., too.
Because the ClearVision team began working with A.I. early in its development, they have experienced its growth over time and are able to discern where it can streamline work and allow more time for creativity — the goal when using A.I., company wide, is to create efficiency. Jennifer Trakhtenberg, ClearVision’s co-COO and chief people officer, told Vision Monday, “We have challenged our leaders to find opportunities to incorporate A.I. into their daily work routines and urged our employees to identify ways to create efficiency within their days. The premise from the beginning has been to have an even better job by streamlining less value-added tasks and consider this to be your own personal digital assistant. We talk about it frequently at leader morning meetings, and we look for opportunities where it did not work as we would have expected.”
To ensure that A.I. is adding value, ClearVision leadership, as well as those who use the technology regularly, shared that they pay close attention to changes in the technology and attend educational workshops and CE talks specifically dedicated to artificial intelligence. They also monitor any potential downsides to the technology, including privacy policies, fact checking, security and more, the company said. Most importantly, though, using A.I. in the workspace is about learning to adjust and accept change and see how you can make it useful to you. Nicole Ramos, art director at ClearVision, said, “Like anything that involves change, it takes a bit of adjustment and learning. You really have to alter the way you think about A.I. and truly embrace it. Learning new tools may take some extra time, but the amount of time you save on your work thereafter is worthwhile. The learning doesn’t stop after you pick up one tool; the beauty of it being so ‘new’ is that more and more tools are becoming available and constantly changing.”
As A.I. technology continues to develop and improve, ClearVision will continue to find ways to use it for everyone’s benefit — both internally and externally. Said ClearVision president David Friedfeld, “It is really going to be about the next five to 10 years. ClearVision will continue to lean into A.I. so we can grow with the tools, and when the next major shifts are happening around A.I. being active and being able to interact with other A.I. tools, that is when you are going to see a real shift.
“Companies cannot not adapt if you are not along for the ride, it will be too drastic of a sea change,” he added. “We really want to provide a superior customer experience from product to customer service, and if that means we can be more efficient in understanding what the needs and wants are and be faster and more efficient, A.I. can help us all get there.”
Contact Lens Companies Embrace the Promise of A.I.
With the use and implementation of A.I. exploding across nearly every industry and business, contact lens companies find themselves using the technology for a variety of functions, including optimizing supply chain logistics, patient screening and diagnosis, and data collection and analysis. While some companies appear to be taking a somewhat slower and more cautious approach to A.I., others appear to be diving in as early adopters.
“At J&J, we are committed to supporting sight at every stage of life. Our goal is to leverage the power and promise of A.I. in combination with our deep expertise in science, to accelerate our ability to solve unmet eye health needs for both patients and eye care professionals,” said Peter Menziuso, company group chairman, Johnson & Johnson Vision.
“As an example, A.I. is helping us optimize our supply chain logistics so we can deliver our broad portfolio of eye health solutions (like our Acuvue brand contact lenses and Tecnis presbyopia-correcting IOLs) with greater reliability, increasing predictability, and minimizing disruption for the people counting on our products. We are also using A.I. and machine learning to help more patients by optimizing our vision clinical trials and streamlining patient recruitment, screening and diagnosis, and data collection and analysis,” Menziuso said. Embracing the potential of A.I. and staying up to date is also important as the technology appears to change almost daily, with new tools and technologies designed to help businesses work smarter and faster. Within that movement forward, privacy and security also remain paramount as is the goal of keeping the patient at the forefront of priorities.
“As an industry leader, CooperVision is deeply committed to adapting to the evolving needs of eye care professionals and contact lens wearers,” said Simon Seshadri, senior vice president, global marketing and life cycle management. “We understand the importance of staying at the forefront of technological advancements, including integrating A.I. technologies into our business.”
Seshadri continued, “At CooperVision, we are embracing the potential of A.I. As such, we are actively exploring how A.I. can be utilized across various facets of our business, from advancing research and development processes to optimizing commercial efforts and streamlining manufacturing and supply chain management. We aim to harness the power of A.I. to drive innovation and improve efficiency while ensuring that our customers, wearers, and partners remain at the forefront of our considerations. In the context of A.I., we place paramount emphasis on privacy and security.”
A.I. in Ophthalmic Lens Design
In the seven years since Shamir introduced the first ophthalmic lens designed with A.I., the technology has proliferated, particularly in progressive lens design. Although not every progressive requires A.I.’s capabilities, many lens designers use it to predict a wearer’s visual behavior by capturing and analyzing millions of data points, enabling them to create advanced, personalized progressive lenses. Here are some examples of how A.I. is being applied to lens designs and design systems.
Powered by behavioral artificial intelligence, EssilorLuxottica’s Varilux XR series is the first “eye-responsive progressive lens for instant sharpness in motion,” according to its manufacturer, EssilorLuxottica. The company noted that with today’s modern lifestyle, our eyes are moving 100,000 times a day to process all the visual information we are exposed to. Researchers from EssilorLuxottica studied more than 6,500 consumers to enrich their understanding of presbyopes’ lifestyles and visual challenges. The group has gathered over one million data points to develop a behavioral modeling system that predicts how presbyope individuals will look at objects around them.
“The power of artificial intelligence lies in the quantity, quality, and variety of data, and the way they’re analyzed,” commented Norbert Gorny, co-chief operating officer at EssilorLuxottica, when the company announced its A.I. initiative in 2023.
“The insights we established from data collected from customer orders, real life wearer tests, in store measurements and physiological models are exclusive to EssilorLuxottica. Thanks to the digital twinning technology, we can now establish a visual behavior profile for every single prescription and provide the first eye-responsive lens that respects the natural behavior of the eye.”
The Essilor digital twin is an A.I. system that provides a realistic indication of spectacle-wearer perception through lenses by simulating the wearer’s experience with their lenses in a 3D environment, according to EssilorLuxottica. This tool allows one to replicate the digital twin of any patient, reproduce daily-life situations, and assess the behavior of this humanized digital twin when wearing a specific pair of lenses.
The Varilux XR series currently consists of Varilux XR and the new Varilux XR track, which integrate NVB (Near Vision Behavior), a measurement that factors in a wearer’s visual behavior and posture while replicating a reading task. This enables the wearer’s near vision zone to be positioned according to their natural behavior, according to EssilorLuxottica. Beyond adjusting the position and vertical area of the near vision zone, Varilux XR track lenses also extend the near vision width according to patient behavior.
Shamir: Autograph Intelligence 2, Driver Intelligence, Spark 4W
Shamir recently updated its flagship progressive, Autograph Intelligence, to meet the visual needs of today’s presbyopes. Following the initial launch of Autograph Intelligence in 2018, Shamir has gathered more data and findings to improve the performance and capabilities of this progressive lens design that evolves with the wearer’s visual age to adapt to everyday visual tasks involving smartphones, tablets, computer screens and laptops, according to Shamir.
The updated design offers advanced personalization using artificial intelligence and a wider digital zone, Shamir says. The result is a progressive lens that adapts to the wearer’s visual age while keeping up with their visual needs. Shamir recommends pairing Autograph Intelligence 2 with its Glacier Expression A.I. coating.
Shamir Autograph Intelligence is supported by three proprietary technologies developed by the company.
• Eye-Point Technology A.I. utilizes Head Eye Integrative Movement software to see exactly where in the lens patients look, along both the vertical and horizontal meridian, when they perform tasks in the various visual zones.
• Continuous Design Technology integrates research findings with patient habits and visual needs to provide a seamless lens for every Visual Age. This allows the patient to comfortably move from one add to the next without any adaptation concerns.
• Visual A.I. Engine applies elements of Artificial Intelligence that mimic human intelligence. It makes go/no-go decisions based on predefined rules, and the output ensures uniform and controlled planning for any combination of parameters with extreme accuracy for each new lens design.
Last year, Shamir expanded its A.I. lens portfolio with the addition of Driver Intelligence. The lens, which is optimized for driving, is based on a design that analyzes visual eye points to determine the best lens design configuration based on the positioning of the mirror and dashboard. This enables sharp and clear vision with less glare — in all lighting conditions and increases road awareness with exceptionally wide and clear visual fields, according to Shamir.
It accounts for changing light, eye fatigue, and reaction time, leading to enhanced and superior performance on the road, according to Shamir. Shamir Driver Intelligence comes as a set of two pairs of glasses, one for daylight and one for nighttime driving.
Explaining how Shamir incorporates A.I. into its products, Ranaan Naftalovich, CEO and president of Shamir Insight North America, explained, “At Shamir we try to do things that make people’s lives better, and artificial intelligence just helps us to get there faster. Autograph intelligence has 12 different designs. When you try to do a customized lens with 12 different designs, you have 430,000 options. With artificial intelligence you can do it (customization) much faster, and that’s what has allowed us to bring technology into the market much faster.”
In addition to the design process, Shamir also uses A.I. to gather wearer data that informs the design. In 2022 Shamir invested in Blink, which has developed A.I.-driven eye-tracking technology that allows a better understanding of visual behavior. “We have to use artificial intelligence to understand what is actually happening to us when we’re looking at the world in a dynamic situation,” Naftalovich said. In addition to lens design, Shamir uses A.I. in its newest digital measuring technology, Spark 4W. Like its predecessor, Spark 4, it enables ECPs to obtain precise and automatic measurements of their patients’ PD with one click, according to Shamir. A state-of-the-art A.I. algorithm detects and processes 192 facial landmarks.
Because it runs on WiFi, the standalone system can be located anywhere in the store, and it carries an integrated CPU. With the accompanying app, Shamir Spark Remote, ECPs can quickly capture PD using any mobile device and complete the process by filling in the additional parameters once the patient has left the store.
IOT reports that its A.I.-powered lens design system, IOT Lens Data Advisor, leverages machine learning algorithms to create personalized progressive lenses that maximize wearer satisfaction. IOT Lens Data Advisor collects and analyzes vast amounts of data, including wearer visual profiles, lens parameters, and wearer satisfaction ratings. By identifying patterns and correlations within this data, the system can predict the ideal lens design for each individual, taking into account their unique visual needs and preferences, IOT said. The system’s machine learning capabilities enable it to continuously learn and evolve as it gathers more data from wearers, according to IOT. This iterative process ensures that IOT Lens Data Advisor stays at the forefront of lens design, consistently improving its ability to deliver optimal visual experiences, according to IOT.
IOT Lens Data Advisor is not only a powerful tool for creating personalized lenses but also a valuable asset for eye care professionals. By streamlining the lens-selection process and increasing wearer satisfaction, IOT Lens Data Advisor empowers opticians to provide their patients with the best possible vision care, according to Natalia Villaveiran, IOT outbound marketing manager.
Zeiss’s new, refreshed SmartLife portfolio uses A.I. as part of the company’s Intelligence Augmented Design (IAD) approach. A Zeiss spokesperson explained that IAD is part of the company’s top-tier Individual 3 portion of the portfolio, which includes three designs: a freeform PAL, SV and digital (boost) lenses.
Zeiss defines IAD as “technology that supports and complements human performance without replacing it.” Instead of forcefully applying data science, Zeiss applies the smart technologies of A.I., computer science, and machine learning in the lens design process, keeping the eye care practitioner at the center, according to Robert Spirito, head of marketing for Zeiss Vision Care U.S.
Zeiss Intelligence Augmented Design technology uses smart data science to further optimize the lens design. The individual parameters of the wearer, which are collected by measurement by the eye care professional, are compared with 12.5 million data points of the visual behavior of certain age groups to make the target design more precise.
In this way, the technology determines not only the distances that will be needed in the lens for everyday life, but also how the eye and head movements of people who wear glasses will appear. Together, this is translated into a target design that optimally matches the visual behavior, Zeiss reports.
With its new artificial intelligence technology, Rodenstock is now able to make what it calls Biometric Intelligent Glasses (B.I.G.) available to all progressive lens wearers. The company offers two versions: B.I.G. NORM and B.I.G. EXACT, which uses additional eye measurement data.
Using statistical analysis, Rodenstock said it can determine new, more precise lens calculations for all the most important biometric parameters in the eye. With these new lens calculation norms, the lens maker is able to tap the potential of one of the biggest biometric data sets in the industry, comprising 500,000 individual biometric eye scans. Rodenstock’s new lens calculation norms allow the company to create an approximate biometric model of the eye, using just the standard prescription values delivered to Rodenstock by opticians as input.
According to Rodenstock, the benefits of B.I.G. EXACT — Biometric Intelligent Glasses that are produced using exact measurements from Rodenstock’s DNEye Scanner — remain unparalleled, the company’s A.I. technology enables it to increase the level of biometric accuracy within standard progressive lenses.