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

Samsung’s Galaxy Watch and Ring will soon flag early signs of dementia

Samsung's latest wearable software won't diagnose dementia, but it might catch early cognitive changes first, giving you and your doctor a valuable head start in tracking brain health.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Fitness tile on a Galaxy Watch 8 Classic in Black on a wrist
Nirave Gondhia / Digital Trends

At the CES 2026, Samsung’s Vice President and Head of Digital Health, Praveen Raja, announced that the company is working on a new set of AI-powered tools to monitor cognitive function and identify the early signs of dementia in users (via official newsroom post).

The feature should be available for the newer Galaxy Watch and Galaxy Ring models in the near future. It will work by analyzing users’ everyday behavior, including changes in speech patterns (including how someone interacts with the on-device AI assistant), movement, and walking cadence, and even how one uses the smart devices in their house.

From fitness tracking to brain health monitoring

Basically, the smartwatch and smart ring (with all their sensors) should be able to detect subtle changes in how users speak, move, and interact with the smart devices around them over time and identify early signs of cognitive decline. However, Samsung remains very careful to note that it won’t be a medical diagnostic tool at launch.

Recommended Videos

Instead, it will alert users and families to potential signs of mental decline, suggesting they consult a medical professional for further guidance. The technology relies heavily on artificial intelligence: it gathers and processes data from a bunch of sensors on the health-monitoring devices, processes them on the devices (comparing real-time data to baseline metrics), and informs users of any disparities.

The cognitive monitoring feature marks a major shift in how consumer wearables can help users track their mental health (in addition to their physical health). Until now, smartwatches have primarily focused on physical metrics like steps, calories, and heart rate. But Samsung’s cognitive monitoring feature aims to change that.

Globally, dementia affects millions of people, and earlier detection could seriously help curb the symptoms or take preventive measures in time to either slow its progression or improve the quality of life through timely medication and lifestyle changes. Even though clinical validation and medical integration remain a question at this point, the feature sounds promising.

While Samsung hasn’t confirmed the availability of the cognitive monitoring feature, it should be available as a beta (for testing) in select markets around the globe. If successful, Samsung’s cognitive monitoring feature could quietly change what we expect from health-tracking wearables, helping them evolve from fitness trackers to an early warning system for brain health.

Most recently, a Samsung Health update added smarter snoring detection to Galaxy Watches.

Shikhar Mehrotra
For more than five years, Shikhar has consistently simplified developments in the field of consumer tech and presented them…
Apple’s rumored camera AirPods Pro may have hit a major roadblock
Bloomberg had them nearly done. Kosutami says suspended. The truth is somewhere Apple hasn't shared yet.
AirPods Pro 3 case view top

In May, Bloomberg reported that Apple's camera-equipped AirPods Pro had reached "advanced" testing and could be heading toward early mass production. As someone who has used both AirPods Pro 2 and AirPods Pro 3, I was looking forward to them.

This week, a leaker has contradicted that. Kosutami, a prototype collector and occasional Apple leaker, posted on X that the project has been "suspended." No additional details were provided. The post appeared to correct an earlier June update in which Kosutami had described the product's development "case" as "concluded," suggesting the revision was meaningful (via MacRumors).

Read more
Your Galaxy Watch is losing a health feature, and the replacement needs another gadget
Samsung is killing Vascular Load on Galaxy Watches
Blood pressure on Samsung Galaxy Watch 8.

Samsung’s Galaxy Watches have been leaning harder into health features with every generation. Sleep scores, heart metrics, blood pressure, and much more are all big selling points. Samsung is removing the standalone Vascular Load feature for Galaxy Watch users in the United States.

According to a Samsung Health notice spotted by users on Reddit (via SammyGuru), the feature will no longer be available starting in late July with Samsung Health 7.0 and the One UI Watch 9 update. Samsung’s notice reportedly says existing Vascular Load records will also disappear from Samsung Health once the feature is removed. Users who want to keep that history need to export their personal data in advance through Samsung Health settings.

Read more
The OPPO Watch X3 has a ridiculous feature I cannot stop using
My smartwatch let me doomscroll from my wrist
Oppo Watch X3 Media Controls

While smartwatches were built to make us more health-conscious and have us reach for our phones less often. I always believed that a second (smaller) screen on your wrist basically can be just as distracting as your smartphone, and the Oppo Watch X3 decided to stop pretending by doubling down on this.

The Oppo Watch X3 comes with a dedicated remote control feature that lets me control my phone from my wrist, and I am having way too much fun messing around with it. This sounds ridiculous, but it has also been surprisingly handy.

Read more