At TechRadar, I often find myself pitting wearables against each other. Next week, you’ll be able to read what happened when I took the Coros Vertix 2S, Garmin Fenix 8 and Oura Ring Gen 4 out on a 5k run at the same time. I performed a similar test when pitting the best smartwatches against Strava while running the 2024 London Marathon.

One aspect of health tracking I haven’t group-tested is sleep tracking. Fortunately, researchers from Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, have done the legwork for me by testing the Oura Ring Generation 3 against an Apple Watch Series 8 and Fitbit Sense 2, to see which one is the most accurate. To set a benchmark, the three devices were also tested against a gold-standard, medical-grade polysomnograph (a tool used to diagnose and measure sleep disorders).

Studying 35 participants, the results showed that all devices accurately detected sleeping and wakeful states. However, the Oura Ring was best at discriminating between sleep stages, matching the polysomnograph with about 80% accuracy.

(Image credit: Shutterstock)

Published in the journal Sensors, the researchers wrote: “The Oura ring was not different from PSG [the polysomnograph] in terms of wake, light sleep, deep sleep, or REM sleep estimation.



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