HEKA, the Inventor of AI Mattress, Launches the Sixth-Generation AI Mattress, Ushering in a New Era of Healthy Sleep

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., Sept. 08, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Recently, in Silicon Valley, the hub of technological innovation, HEKA, the AI mattress brand owned by iFutureLab Inc., once again led the trend by launching its new, sixth-generation AI mattress. Building on the previous AI mattresses, this new model further enhances response speed, autonomous feedback learning capability, and all-night dynamic adaptation, providing customers with an improved deep sleep experience. This milestone innovation not only signifies another leap in HEKA's intelligent sleep solutions but also offers an unprecedented healthy sleep experience for users worldwide who seek high-quality sleep.

HEKA is a global AI life science company, with its global research center in Silicon Valley and its global high-end design center in Paris. As the inventor of the AI mattress, HEKA is dedicated to improving human sleep through AI technology, sleep medicine, and spinal medicine. The HEKA team invented the AI mattress in 2013 and applied for and then obtained the patents in 2014. The research team comprises experts from leading international institutions, including the Stanford University Center for Sleep Science and Medicine, and iFutureLab, etc.

HEKA, the Inventor of AI Mattress, Launches the Sixth-Generation AI Mattress, Ushering in a New Era of Healthy Sleep.jpeg
HEKA, the Inventor of AI Mattress, Launches the Sixth-Generation AI Mattress, Ushering in a New Era of Healthy Sleep.jpeg

Professor Jamie, Co-Founder of HEKA, Professor at Stanford University School of Medicine, and Co-Director of Stanford University Center for Sleep and Circadian Sciences said that the HEKA AI mattress is highly adaptive. By adjusting to the user's sleep position, it protects the neck, back, and waist, effectively improving sleep quality, reducing nerve stimulation, and enhancing deep sleep, thereby minimizing discomfort upon waking caused by improper sleep position.

Traditional material mattresses with fixed structures cannot adapt to the different physiological curves of the cervical and lumbar spine in various sleep positions. Studies show that a person's sleep positions change dozens of times throughout the night, and the body's curves differ with each position. A single pillow and traditional mattress cannot automatically adapt to these changes throughout the night. Moreover, most traditional mattresses are either too soft or too hard, with the former failing to provide sufficient support and the latter potentially causing excessive pressure on certain areas, both of which are detrimental to spinal and sleep health.

Not only mattresses but traditional pillows struggle to conform to cervical curvature in different sleep positions due to their fixed structure. The neck and shoulders require different support when lying on the back or side, and a single pillow cannot automatically adapt to these positional changes overnight, providing the necessary support.