Montreal Gazette

Wake up to new technology

Companies increasing­ly explore devices that help track your sleep behaviours

- ANNE D’INNOCENZIO The Associated Press

NEW YORK Pillows that track your snoozing patterns? A bed that adjusts based on how much you twist and turn? Companies are adding more technology into their products, hoping to lure customers craving a better night’s sleep.

Some specialize­d businesses are making gadgets that promise to measure and improve the quality of slumber, while mass-market retailers like Best Buy are offering simpler ideas like the effect different lighting can have on falling sleep. But with ever-growing options, people may find items that are getting more sophistica­ted — but still may not improve sleep.

The interest in sleep has intensifie­d. The number of sleep centres accredited by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine nearly tripled from 2000 to 2015, it says. People are more likely to brag about how much they spent for a mattress than on their clothes, says Marian Salzman, CEO of Havas PR North America.

“Sleep is the new status symbol,” she says.

It’s a big business. One of the more expensive products is Sleep Number’s 360 Smart Bed, which runs from $3,449 to $4,999. (All figures U.S. dollars.) It makes adjustment­s based on how restless people are while they’re sleeping. The Zeeq pillow, which sells for $299 and is from bedding brand REM-Fit, monitors snoring and can gently vibrate to nudge someone into a different sleep position.

“I’m willing to spend more on sleep technology because it will hopefully help me fall asleep quicker, stay asleep longer and be more rested when I wake up,” says Frank Ribitch, a self-described gadget junkie from Martinez, Calif., who tracks his sleep with apps connected to a Sleep Number bed and the Zeeq pillow.

Insufficie­nt sleep is a public health concern, U.S. federal officials say, with more than one-third of American adults not getting enough regularly. That can contribute to problems like obesity and diabetes.

Finding solutions could be a lucrative enterprise. Earlier this year Apple Inc. bought Finland-based Beddit, which was making an app and sleep-monitoring device that’s placed under the sheet on top of the mattress. The $150 sensor begins tracking when a person lies down, and analyzes data such as the portion of time someone is in bed asleep before waking up. It also monitors heart rate, temperatur­e, movement and snoring.

“Previously, it was about the sleeping pill and people didn’t want to talk about sleep apnea,” Beddit co-founder Lasse Leppakorpi said before Apple bought the company. “Snoring is embarrassi­ng. But this has been untapped opportunit­y.”

Apple, whose own Apple Watch tracks activity and offers sleeptrack­ing experience­s through thirdparty apps, declined to talk about the future of Beddit. Leppakorpi noted before the acquisitio­n that Beddit had been working with MIT and other sleep labs that used the devices to collect data on patients.

At the Stanford Sleep Medicine Center, medical director Clete A. Kushida tests new therapies and medication­s. Over the past two years, the analysis has expanded to wearable devices. The scientists assess how well the devices match the centre’s own overnight sleep studies, which use measures such as heart rate and brain wave activity to determine the length and the stages of sleep.

Kushida’s conclusion? “Consumer wearable devices are not there in accurately detecting the stages of sleep,” he said. The problem: They focus on motion, which can be deceptive since a person could be lying in bed awake.

San Francisco-based startup Hello, the maker of a product aimed at tracking sleep via a clip attached to a person’s bedsheet, recently announced it was shutting down amid reports it didn’t correctly track sleep patterns.

Still, Kushida believes consumer products are getting better and will be able to accurately monitor and solve sleep issues in the next five to 10 years.

Separate from gadgets, some stores are highlighti­ng sounds and smells they say can help people sleep better. Longtime insomniac favourite HSN Inc. offers a $299 Nightingal­e Sleep System that masks indoor and outdoor noises. Best Buy has a Philips Lighting’s system that works with devices like Nest and Amazon Alexa to let people choose the colours and brightness of lights and program them to turn off at certain times or respond to the sun.

And a company called Sensorwake is launching a product that releases smells like fresh linen it says can help you sleep better.

Sleep is the new status symbol.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sleep Number store manager Lee Pulliam shows how the company’s technology tracks your sleeping patterns.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sleep Number store manager Lee Pulliam shows how the company’s technology tracks your sleeping patterns.

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