The results of this study provide further clinical evidence that patient-applied, patch-based PSG is a viable alternative to in-lab PSG, enabling broader access to gold-standard sleep testing.
Sleep apnea affects as many as 80 million in the U.S. Now Apnimed, the $400 million company behind the first ever pill to ...
A new study from the multidisciplinary brain research center at Bar-Ilan University found that jellyfish and sea anemones ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Stanford AI spots disease warnings hiding in your sleep data
While most of us treat a sleep study as a one-night inconvenience, researchers are now turning that single session into a ...
New research reveals poor sleep shortens life more than diet or exercise. Psychiatrist Dr. Daniel Amen shares what happens to ...
Sleep isn’t just about feeling rested—it may be one of the strongest predictors of how long you live. Researchers analyzing ...
Teens catching up on sleep on weekends show a 41% lower risk of depression, per a UO study. Supports flexible rest as a ...
Stanford researchers have developed an AI that can predict future disease risk using data from just one night of sleep. The ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Stanford AI can flag disease risk after just 1 night of sleep
Stanford researchers say a single night in a sleep lab may soon double as a full‑body health scan, with artificial ...
Artificial intelligence can use brain recordings from a single night in a sleep lab to predict a person's risk of developing ...
A new study from Bar-Ilan University shows that one of sleep's core functions originated hundreds of millions of years ago in ...
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