Sonopeace vs. Sleep Trackers
Your smartwatch tells you that you slept badly. Sonopeace actually does something about it.
Last updated: April 2026
Tracking sleep is not the same as improving it
Oura, Whoop, and Apple Watch measure movement, heart rate, and skin temperature to infer what your sleep looked like. Sonopeace uses clinically validated bone conduction frequencies to change how your sleep works.
| Feature | Sleep Trackers | Sonopeace |
|---|---|---|
| Measures sleep | Yes | No (not a tracker) |
| Improves sleep | No | Yes |
| Clinically validated for treatment | No | Yes (IRB-approved) |
| Nothing to wear | No (wrist/finger) | Yes (under pillow) |
| Drug-free | N/A | Yes |
| Targets deep sleep | No (observes it) | Yes (enhances it) |
Three reasons a sleep score is not a solution
Tracking poor sleep does not fix poor sleep
You wake up. Your ring says your sleep score was 62 and your deep sleep was 43 minutes. Now what? You cannot will yourself into more slow-wave sleep any more than you can will your heart rate to drop. Measurement without intervention is just a more detailed way of knowing you feel tired. The data changes nothing about your sleep architecture.
Accuracy is limited
Consumer wearables infer sleep stages from movement and heart rate, not brain activity. The gold standard for sleep measurement is polysomnography, which reads electrical signals directly from the brain. When researchers compared popular trackers against polysomnography, sensitivity for detecting deep sleep was as low as 51% for Apple Watch. Even the best-performing consumer device reached only about 80%. The sleep stage breakdown on your wrist is an educated guess, not a diagnosis.
It can cause anxiety
Orthosomnia is a recognized clinical phenomenon where obsessive sleep tracking actually makes sleep worse. Researchers have documented patients who trust their tracker more than their own sense of how they slept, creating a feedback loop of vigilance and anxiety at bedtime. A 2024 cross-sectional study found that orthosomnia correlates positively with health anxiety, perfectionism, and dysfunctional beliefs about sleep. The tool meant to help becomes part of the problem.
Treatment, not observation
Sleep trackers belong to the category of observation tools. They record what happened while you slept. That information can be interesting, but it is passive by nature. It cannot reach into your brain and influence the electrical patterns that define deep, restorative sleep.
Sonopeace is fundamentally different. It uses bone conduction to deliver low-frequency acoustic stimulation synchronized to the brain's natural slow-wave rhythms. This is a clinically studied intervention, not a reporting dashboard. The device sits under your pillow and works while you sleep. There is nothing to wear, nothing to charge on your wrist, and no morning score to obsess over. Instead of telling you what went wrong, it actively works to make things go right.
of participants achieved full remission from clinical insomnia
Measured by the Insomnia Severity Index (ISI) in an IRB-approved study
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