Litcius/Paper detail

Apple Watch Sleep and Physiological Tracking Compared to Clinically Validated Actigraphy, Ballistocardiography and Polysomnography

Dominic J. Jaworski, Edward J. Park

202313 citationsDOI

Abstract

This paper investigates the performance of the latest Apple Watch (Series 8, released September 2022) in comparison with research grade devices. The Apple Watch was compared to wrist worn actigraphy, non-contact ballistocardiography (BCG) placed in the bed and evaluated with polysomnography (PSG) as a reference system. Sleep analysis and individual cardiorespiratory parameters were measured from the Apple Watch. The Apple Watch performed well for identifying sleep-wake states but had difficulty identifying the sleep stages compared to the reference PSG system. Physiological parameters obtained from the Apple Watch compared well with measurements of the other devices in the study.Clinical Relevance- Consumer devices are readily available and inexpensive compared to clinical devices. A consumer device that can provide accurate physiological data equivalent to a clinical device would let researchers and clinicians collect data without the intrusive nature of a clinical device.

Topics & Concepts

BallistocardiographyPolysomnographyActigraphyCardiorespiratory fitnessSleep (system call)MedicineAccelerometerComputer sciencePhysical therapyCardiologyInternal medicineCircadian rhythmApneaOperating systemNon-Invasive Vital Sign MonitoringHeart Rate Variability and Autonomic ControlObstructive Sleep Apnea Research