Fatigue Science in the Press
BC Business Magazine: Vancouver's wearable tech stars
The Vancouver Canucks have been ardent fans of our product and went so far as to sign an exclusive 4-year deal with Fatigue Science to prevent competitors from taking advantage of the technology.
go! Vancouver (Shaw TV): ConnectFX event featuring Fatigue Science
BCTIA hosted ConnectFX, a one-day event designed to build connections between local businesses by putting BC's latest technology innovations on stage in front of some of the Province's largest enterprise organizations.
The Globe and Mail: Helping companies track and optimize workers' sleep schedules
Instead of displaying an essentially arbitrary unit of fatigue on graphs, it expresses its in a far more familiar context: Blood-alcohol level.
SportTechie.com: Analyzing the sleep patterns of the Dallas Mavericks
The start of the NBA season has basketball fans smiling, but the rise of tech in support of better basketball has NBA owners smiling more. The influence of tech is growing, and we’ve seen more than a few headlines over the weeks leading into the 2013-14 season to prove the relationship is growing.
Global BC News: What effect does daylight savings time have on your body?
There’s well-established evidence to suggest that when we set our clocks forward in the spring, that lost hour of sleep increases the number of car accidents even heart attacks the next day.
The Province: What will you do with that extra hour this weekend?
When asked by The Province how many hours of sleep we should be getting, Byrne immediately answered: “How well do you want to perform?”
Vancouver Sun: Dying for sleep - Vancouver company's technology measures sleep
Sleep is crucial - "Spring forward, fall back" means clocks get set back an hour at 2 a.m. Sunday so we get an extra hour of sleep.
Truck News: Can a high-tech wristband measure driver fatigue and predict crashes?
Managing fatigue has always been an issue in the trucking industry, all the more so as the professional driver population ages.
NBC Sports: Mavericks getting scientific about sleep, fatigue and game performance
They tend to stay up late, get a few hours sleep, go through practice/shoot around, get an afternoon nap then be ready for the game (or whatever is on tap) that night.