A tiny camera breakthrough could reshape how phones and wearables are built. Researchers at KAIST have developed an ultra-thin camera module that tackles one of the most persistent design problems in consumer tech, the camera hump.
The system delivers a 140-degree field of view in a structure under 1mm thick, thin enough to sit nearly flush inside modern devices. Current high-performance cameras rely on stacked lenses, which add bulk and force protruding modules or thicker hardware.
Instead, this design uses a microlens array inspired by insect vision, combining multiple captures into a single high-resolution image. The result keeps detail and wide-angle coverage while cutting down thickness.
Microlens trick replaces stacked optics
The core innovation comes from how the camera captures and processes light. The system uses multiple tiny lenses arranged in an array, each capturing a different part of the scene.
This design borrows from a parasitic insect’s visual system, which builds a complete image by stitching together partial views. The KAIST team adapted that split-and-merge concept, so the camera can deliver both a wide field of view and high resolution without increasing thickness.
That consistency matters in real use. Wide-angle cameras often blur at the edges, especially up close, but this design keeps the image stable from center to periphery.
Why this matters for device design
For device makers, this changes what’s possible in tight spaces. The camera keeps strong imaging performance while shrinking its footprint.
At 0.94mm thick, it fits where traditional modules can’t. That makes it well suited for wearables and medical tools like endoscopes, where size and clarity are critical.

Some gaps remain though, as the research does not detail low-light or video performance, which are key in real-world use.
What to watch next
The project is already moving toward commercialization. The team has transferred the technology to an optical imaging company, with plans pointing to market readiness as early as next year.
Early adoption will likely show up in specialized hardware first, especially where precision and space constraints matter most. Medical devices and micro-robots are the most immediate candidates before the technology moves into mainstream consumer products.
Several factors will determine how fast that happens. Manufacturing scale, cost, and compatibility with existing imaging systems remain open questions, and those details haven’t been shared yet.
If those pieces fall into place, the clearest signal will be early products that prove the design works outside the lab, followed by gradual expansion into larger device categories.

