Christine Peterson’s Zeo Research

Christine Peterson’s poster of her Zeo research was one of the highlights of the QS conference for me, as I said. Here’s why.

The correlation between Sleep Stealer score and time awake. When her Sleep Stealer score was 5 or less, she was awake about an hour during the night. When her score was more than 5, she was awake about two hours — a big difference. There should be a big difference, but you could fail to see it for a thousand reasons. The large difference is a validation of the whole thing — above all, an indication that her Zeo is working correctly.

Even when her Sleep Stealer score is low, she is awake a long time. This means there are major determinants of sleep depth not captured by the Sleep Stealer score. With the right Sleep Stealer score — assuming the correlation reflects cause and effect — she can improve from two hours to one hour (one hour difference) but that leaves one hour. This implies that the determinants of time awake not in the Sleep Stealer score are just as important as those that it contains.

Even when she is at the best level of important factors, she is awake a long time. When she had no drinks, she was awake 56 minutes/night. When other people didn’t disrupt her sleep at all, she was awake 54 minutes/night.

The average wake time for women 50-59 is half an hour. That’s a lot of lost time, day after day, night after night. Note however that the data is from Zeo users, who may have worse sleep than average.

It only took three months to collect the data. This isn’t on the poster. Yet this is a solid contribution, in the sense that I learned from it. With perhaps nine months of data and better data analysis, it might be publishable. The main point such a paper would presumably make is that even when you do everything right (Sleep Stealer score = 0) you’re still awake a lot. This point is nowhere in the sleep literature.

Christine, if you would like to sleep better I suggest:

  1. Don’t eat breakfast until at least three hours after you wake up.
  2. Get at least one hour of sunlight early in the morning — e.g., 6 to 7 am. You can do this by working outside. (I work outside several hours every morning.)
  3. Stand on one leg to exhaustion four or more times per day. (I do it six times/day.) You can do this while reading — it should not reduce your free time.

 

 

 

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