The Question Every Smart Ring Owner Eventually Asks

You wake up, check your smart ring app, and see a sleep score that looks nothing like how you feel. Maybe the ring says you got eight hours, but you know you were awake for at least two of them. Or maybe the ring flags your oxygen levels and you start wondering: do I have sleep apnea? Could this tiny device on my finger tell me if I need a sleep study?

These questions are reasonable. Smart rings have become sophisticated wellness tools, and some now include features like SpO2 tracking and sleep apnea screening. But there is a critical gap between what a smart ring can measure and what a clinical sleep study can diagnose — and that gap matters when you are making decisions about your health.

What a Clinical Sleep Study (PSG) Measures That a Smart Ring Cannot

Polysomnography — the formal name for an in-lab sleep study — is the gold standard for diagnosing sleep disorders because it captures multiple physiological signals simultaneously. A smart ring, by contrast, relies almost entirely on photoplethysmography (PPG), which uses light to measure blood volume changes in the finger, plus an accelerometer for movement. That is a fraction of what a sleep study records.

A two-column comparison diagram: left column labeled 'Clinical PSG' with icon-style illustrations of a brain with EEG waveforms, an eye with EOG dots, a jaw with EMG lines, a chest with respiratory effort bands, and a nasal airflow line. Right column labeled 'Smart Ring' shows a finger with a smart ring displaying PPG light pulses and a motion icon. A large X mark separates the columns.
Clinical PSG captures brain waves, eye movements, muscle tone, respiratory effort, and airflow — signals a smart ring cannot measure.