Lodi News-Sentinel

Having trouble sleeping? More technology devices promise relief

- By Mike Freeman THE SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE

SAN DIEGO — Do you believe drinking coffee is keeping you up at night? It’s not — as long as you’re consuming less than four cups per day.

That’s according to a new survey from SleepScore Labs, a spinoff of sleep apnea medical device maker ResMed.

Released at the CES 2017 consumer electronic­s show earlier this month, the SleepScore Labs survey collected data from just under 21,000 people over 1.5 million nights. It highlights how sleep is getting more attention in technology circles.

At CES 2017, more than 20 sleep technology firms showed off their latest gadgets in a new Sleep Technology Marketplac­e. They ranged from sleep tracking mattresses to devices that enable temperatur­e controlled pillows.

Fitness brands also joined the sleep product parade. Under Armour touted its Athlete Recovery Sleepwear. Pitched by New England Patriots’ quarterbac­k Tom Brady, the $200 pajamas have a fabric pattern that claims to absorb “far infrared” energy and transfer it to the body to reduce inflammati­on, improve recovery and promote better sleep.

CES 2017 also was the coming out party for SleepScore Labs, based outside San Diego. A new joint venture of ResMed, TV cardiologi­st Dr. Mehmet Oz and New York-based Pegasus Capital Advisors, the company’s goal is to build an ecosystem around accurately measured sleep.

“We have a lot of people going to bed for enough hours but they are not actually sleeping at that time,” said Colin Lawlor, chief executive of SleepScore Labs. “If you wear a wearable device, it is probably going to tell you that you are sleeping fine. But the truth is you are awake for a significan­t amount of time.”

For now, SleepScore’s efforts center on ResMed’s S+ sleep tracker, though it expects to have additional products, said Lawlor.

The S+ sits on a nightstand, so users don’t wear anything. It contains proprietar­y high resolution sensors that measure respiratio­n and body movement, along with light, noise and temperatur­e in the bedroom. The sensors are good enough to see a person’s pulse, said Lawlor. The radio frequency range is short, so the device can be positioned to monitor the right person.

Using thousands of hours of breathing data, ResMed built algorithms that recognize deep sleep respiratio­n, REM sleep breathing and light sleep patterns, said Lawlor. It reports how much time the user spent in each phase via a smartphone app.

This data is compared to an average to create a SleepScore, which the company hopes becomes the standard measuremen­t of sleep — like calories are for food. The SleepScore in the survey released at CES was 77 out of 100.

“In the consumer electronic­s landscape, there are more and more products that claim to measure sleep,” said Lawlor. “The problem for the consumer and ultimately the companies is nobody knows if any of these things work.”

ResMed’s S+ costs $130 but is on sale for $50 on the SleepScore Labs website through May. There are competitor­s, ranging from pure sleep trackers such as Beddit and Sense to wearable devices from Fitbit and Jawbone. Some sleep tracking devices have come under criticism for how accurately they measure sleep. Lawlor claims ResMed has solved that problem with the S+. Now SleepScore hopes to help consumers understand how they’re sleeping and why it’s important to monitor.

“And then for the industry, we are aiming to provide access to the SleepScore technology as a service to help them test, validate and improve their products,” he said. “We think we can enable the ecosystem around that simple idea: If you can measure it, you can manage it.”

 ?? SLEEPSCORE LABS/TNS ?? SleepScore Labs, a spin out of ResMed, hopes to build the ecosystem around accurate sleep monitoring centered on ResMed's S+ in-home, non-contact tracking device.
SLEEPSCORE LABS/TNS SleepScore Labs, a spin out of ResMed, hopes to build the ecosystem around accurate sleep monitoring centered on ResMed's S+ in-home, non-contact tracking device.

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