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The Elemind headband promises to help you fall asleep faster. This is what happened when I put it to the test for a nap.
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I am a power nap believer, especially if you need a boost to get through a particularly long day. So when I was offered the opportunity to test the Elemind headband, which is designed to help you fall asleep on demand, I couldn’t pass it up. Taking a nap for work? Yes, please.
Priced at $349 (with an optional monthly subscription fee of $7 or more for accessing your sleep data), the Elemind isn’t cheap. However, it’s loaded with tech, including EEG (electroencephalogram) functionality to read your brainwaves. AI for processing that brain activity and audio output to produce sounds that induce sleep. The latter is a low-pitch, rhythmic buzz you can also feel. The sensation isn’t intrusive or distracting, but rather almost feels like a light massage.
“It’s basically noise-canceling those brain waves that keep you awake,” Meredith Perry, co-founder of Elemind, tells me.
There are numerous Reddit threads about the intrigue surrounding this device. The discussion centers on whether it actually works, with many people recommending it, while others are on the fence about this technology, stating that it may be too early to be a market-ready device. To find the answers, I set out to test it myself.
I’ve been working in the sleep industry for years, and I’ve seen and tested a variety of gadgets and products that claim to help you sleep better. Honestly, I understand the skepticism surrounding a product like this, because not many such devices live up to their promises. Naturally, I was eager to see if the Elemind headband is among the hundreds that don’t work or if it was going to be the breakthrough the space needs.
Here’s what I found.