lucidcode announced the commercial availability of the INSPEC, the first lucid dreaming device that detects REM sleep without contact. The INSPEC is a bedside smart camera that watches the sleeper's face under infrared light, identifies the rapid eye movements that signal dreaming, and triggers cues designed to help the sleeper become aware they are dreaming. The device pairs over Bluetooth with the free Lucid Scribe companion app, available on iOS and Android.
REM sleep, the stage of sleep most associated with vivid dreaming, has historically been detected in sleep laboratories using electrooculography, where electrodes placed near the eyes measure electrical activity. The technique is accurate but impractical at home. Consumer alternatives have used EEG headbands, sleep-tracking masks, or smart rings, but these measure proxy signals rather than the eye movements themselves.
The INSPEC takes a fundamentally different approach. An infrared light illuminates the sleeper's face with light invisible to the human eye. The onboard camera locates the face in each frame and measures pixel variance within that region. During quiet sleep, the face remains stable. During REM, subtle eye movements beneath the eyelids produce measurable frame-to-frame variance, which the device aggregates over time to confirm a sustained REM period before firing a cue.
Several layers of filtering separate genuine REM from artifacts. Toss detection resets the counter when the sleeper moves or rolls over. Whole-frame motion is rejected as body movement rather than eye movement. Face tracking pauses detection when the sleeper's face is out of view, with an optional audio prompt to reposition.
When REM is confirmed, the device flashes onboard LEDs and signals the Lucid Scribe app to play a configurable audio cue. The app logs every detection, records snapshots at the moment of detection, and renders a full-night hypnogram showing sleep architecture, REM episodes, and cue delivery times.
The INSPEC pairs the physiological side of lucid dream induction with cognitive training. Recognizing a dream from the inside is a learned habit built during waking life, so the companion Lucid Scribe app trains the underlying skills directly. An 8-step prospective memory training program based on Stephen LaBerge's research drills the cognitive skill that lets a dreamer notice they are dreaming. A 28-day Foundations of Lucidity curriculum builds dream recall, mindfulness, and induction practice day by day. Guided exercises cover every major technique including MILD, SSILD, WBTB, FILD, DEILD, TDI, and TLR. The app also works as a standalone dream journal with speech-to-text dictation and automatic dream sign detection.
"Headbands measure brain waves. Wristbands measure motion. We started there too, with EEG, EKG, and EOG sensors, but kept getting false positives from breathing and other artifacts. So we set up a night-vision camera to verify what was actually happening, and I could see REM sleep clear as day in the video recordings. We kept the camera and dropped the electrodes. The INSPEC is like having a private sleep lab technician that watches you sleep and alerts you when you are dreaming," said Michael Paul Coder, founder of lucidcode and creator of the INSPEC.
Technical details:
- Detection: Real-time REM identification via infrared machine vision
- Illumination: IR spotlight, invisible to the human eye
- Cues: LED flashes, smart watch vibrations, and configurable audio through the paired phone
- Connectivity: Bluetooth Low Energy
- App: Free Lucid Scribe companion app for iOS and Android
- Additional modes: NREM1 detection for sleep-onset techniques, Smart Alarm timed to REM cycles
The INSPEC is available for purchase at https://inspec.me. The Lucid Scribe app is free on the App Store and Google Play.
App Store: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/lucid-scribe-lucid-dreaming/id6755086169
Google Play: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.lucidcode.lucidscribe