The future of sleep tracking could be done without any mattress sensors or wearables, as Apple is investigating using an iPhone, Mac or HomePod mini to provide physiological monitoring.
If you've ever worn your Apple Watch at night so you can wake up to its tactile alerts without disturbing others, you know it's very successful. It's not the most comfortable, though, and it also means you'll have to find time to charge the watch the next day.
Wearable sleep trackers are similar in terms of accuracy, but can be uncomfortable and interfere with the sleep they are trying to check. A newly disclosed patent suggests that Apple has been looking at alternatives, specifically ones that don't require any physical contact with a sleeping person.
There are already devices out there that you would have to be a princess to detect a tracker device smaller than the width of a pea placed on your mattress. This includes Apple's own Beddit Sleep Monitor, which it acquired when Apple acquired Beddit — and then was discontinued in January 2022.
However, "Physiological Monitoring Methods and Systems" proposes a system that does not even have this connection.
"Physiological monitoring is performed using a device that does not require the measurement of electrocardiograms, electroencephalograms, or other electrophysiological signals with uncomfortable electrodes," Apple's patent says, "but is based on comfortable motion and audio measurements ."
"The measurements required for this unobtrusive monitoring are made using systems," it continues, "such as microphones for measuring movement sounds, breathing sounds and snoring; motion sensors such as radar ..."
The same section of the patent does mention "bed-mounted force sensors, wearable motion sensors," and more. So Apple isn't ruling out body or bed sensors, but much of the proposal is about how to track sleep without any such device.
"When monitoring physiological parameters, such as the sleep of a person sleeping in a bed," Apple says, "virtually all measurements from the unobtrusive sensor relate to the sleeping person, with obvious expectations External influences, such as ambient noise, can interfere with measurements.” sleep situation for two people and believe the proposal applies here.
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