Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Wearables
  3. News

Here’s how Samsung plans to track brain health using your devices

Samsung to showcase brain health feature for early Dementia detection at CES 2026

Add as a preferred source on Google
Samsung Galaxy Watch
Unsplash
CES 2026
Read and watch our complete CES coverage here

Samsung is pulling back the curtain on its newest health frontier at CES 2026: a feature called Brain Health. While our watches already track our hearts and our sleep, Samsung is now trying to peek into our cognitive future. This new service isn’t just a fitness tracker for your mind; it’s a sophisticated early-warning system designed to spot the subtle, often invisible signs of dementia long before they become obvious to a doctor.

The core idea behind “Brain Health” is to turn our everyday gadgets into diagnostic powerhouses. Instead of needing a brain scan or a battery of clinical tests, the system looks at “digital biomarkers” – the tiny changes in how we move, talk, and sleep that can signal the onset of cognitive decline.

Recommended Videos

Samsung isn’t just guessing here. The feature is built on research that suggests brain changes can begin a decade or more before a formal Alzheimer’s diagnosis. By embedding this into the Samsung Health app, the company is betting that constant, passive monitoring can catch these “red flags” much earlier than a yearly checkup ever could.

So, what exactly is your phone looking for?

The “Brain Health” system pulls data from your Galaxy phone, Watch, and even the Ring to analyze three main pillars:

Gait Patterns: It tracks your walking speed and the rhythm of your steps. Changes in balance or a slowing pace can be some of the earliest physical signs of cognitive issues.

Vocal Changes: The AI analyzes subtle shifts in your voice – things like speech fluency, the time it takes to recall words, and even the tone or accuracy of your sentences.

Sleep Metrics: While we already track sleep, this feature looks specifically for “stability” and quality patterns that are often disrupted when the brain begins to struggle with memory or processing.

Earlier research from Samsung also hinted at tracking typing speed and messaging patterns, though it remains to be seen if those specific “behavioral” logs will be active in the first version shown at the Wynn Las Vegas.

Samsung is careful to say this isn’t a replacement for a doctor

Instead, if the system notices a downward trend, it acts as a guide. It might suggest “preventive measures” or enroll you in a personalized brain training program – similar to digital brain games – designed to keep your cognitive gears turning. In more serious cases, it can even be set up to alert a guardian or caregiver if it detects an emergency or a sharp decline.

Because this is arguably the most sensitive data a phone can collect, Samsung is leaning hard into its Knox security. The company claims all processing happens locally on your device, meaning your “brain data” isn’t being uploaded to a cloud or shared with external networks.

For now, Brain Health is a “showcase” feature. Samsung has finished the in-house development and is currently putting it through clinical validation with medical institutions to make sure the AI is actually accurate.

If it passes those tests and clears regulatory hurdles, it could be a game-changer for aging populations. It transforms a smartwatch from a luxury toy into a vital piece of medical equipment that offers peace of mind – or at least a head start on a very difficult journey. We expect to hear more about a possible rollout for the Galaxy Watch 9 or future S-series phones as those clinical trials wrap up later this year.

Moinak Pal
Moinak Pal is has been working in the technology sector covering both consumer centric tech and automotive technology for the…
Samsung’s smart glasses leak shows why your next Galaxy wearable may live on your face
Galaxy Glasses may turn Samsung’s Watch, Ring, and phone into one face-worn ecosystem
Samsung Galaxy Glasses leak

While Samsung already has a bunch of wearables, its upcoming smart glasses might tighten the experience even further. A new leak from SammyGuru offers an early look at the Galaxy Glasses Manager app, the companion app Samsung is expected to use for its new smart glasses.

The leak does not reveal final pricing, battery life, launch date, or every hardware spec. Unlike your typical leak that just hints at a device, the companion app actually makes it sound more real.

Read more
Meta will now charge you for the best AI feature on its smart glasses, and there’s a limit even if you pay
Meta is capping free Conversation Focus use to 3 hours per month, while Meta One Premium raises that to 15.
A person wearing the Ray-Ban Meta smartglasses.

Ray-Ban Meta glasses owners are getting less free use out of one of the glasses' AI features starting this month. Conversation Focus, which isolates and amplifies the voice of the person a wearer is talking to in loud settings, has been capped at three hours of use per month for anyone who doesn't pay for Meta One Premium. Meta confirmed the change on a support page this week, which also notes that a subscription is not required to use the AI glasses in general.

What the new usage tiers actually look like

Read more
OASIS Smart ring hides a trackpad and it lets you whisper-control your computer
OASIS 1 pairs private AI dictation with a tiny trackpad built into the ring itself
OASIS Smart ring Featured on hand

For decades, we've interacted with computers using keyboards, mice, and touchscreens. OASIS thinks it's time for something different. The startup has unveiled the OASIS 1, a smart ring designed for private AI dictation, letting users whisper naturally while a built-in microphone transcribes their words. And when the AI inevitably gets something wrong? There's a tiny trackpad built into the ring to fix it.

A microphone on your finger, a trackpad in the same ring

Read more