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by kergonath
1958 days ago
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You might have missed it, but they’ve publicised every year the advances in ResearchKit. It’s been around for 6 years now, and has influenced the design of several generations of watches. They have partnerships with various hospitals and universities, and severalstudies that were made based on data from Apple Watches. You are disingenuous when you reduce the device to an accelerometer with a network chip. But even so, the problem with a lot of clinical studies is not the complex equipment required. Instead, it’s enrolment, and the fact that you have to go to a lab to perform tests and that nothing that happens outside these tests is measured. This could be gait, heartbeat, sleep patterns, or a lot of other things. The fact that people keep their Apple Watches on their wrist all the time, and that it’s easy to enrol and that there are significant data protection measures in places helps with the most complicated aspects of running a large-scale study. I would suggest reading at least a Wikipedia article before spewing uninformed bullshit. |
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I did miss that. Would love a citation.
>You are disingenuous
It doesn't make sense to say that I might have missed something then accuse me of being disingenuous. If what Apple is doing is really groundbreaking, then I really did miss something, and I'm not being disingenuous by thinking this article is BS. My response should serve as further proof of my GENUINITY.
Your second paragraph was hard to follow. I understand there is a wide variety of applications for Apple's 'watch' and that its 'cutting edge technology'. My issue has to do with the funny connection between a product that Apple markets to consumers and faux medical research articles created for the sole purpose of a citation in a marketing article. Seems kind of DISINGENUOUS of apple and this 'news' site.
>ResearchKit (an app in the apple store)
>It's easy to enroll
>publicized every year
>partnerships with various hospitals
Marketing
Enrollment has 2 Ls by the way.