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During the watchOS 3 segment of Apple's keynote presentation at the Worldwide Developer's Conference last week, Apple introduced a new mindfulness-based app called Breathe.

The idea behind Breathe is to help Apple Watch owners better manage everyday stress, and works by prompting users to take a short time out to focus their attention on the simple act of breathing.

By default, Breathe serves up a one-minute session which guides the user through seven breaths. The duration can be extended to up to five minutes by rotating the Digital Crown, while breathing can be slowed to four breaths per minute, or increased to ten per minute.

watchos3_breathe-800x533.jpg

As the session begins, the app asks the user to "Be still, and bring your attention to your breath". A mandala-like series of concentric circles then begin to expand and contract on the watch screen as a visual guide for the user to adjust the rate of their breath.

What's not obvious from demos is that the app also makes use of the Apple Watch's haptic feedback, by initiating a delicate tapping rhythm on the wrist that begins fast and gradually fades at the top of each breath, as a subtle cue to exhale.

The use of haptic feedback also means the user can close their eyes as the session takes place, while the intensity of the feedback can be adjusted in the app settings.

When the session comes to an end, the user's recorded heart-rate during the session is shown, as is the total number of minutes that have been spent using the app that day. An option to retake the session and "Breathe again" also appears on screen.

The default setting for the app is to prompt a session every four hours, but prompts can be snoozed and their frequency can also be changed in the app's settings.

Additionally, a Breathe complication can be added to watch faces, allowing users to start a session with a simple tap whenever they choose.


During the Keynote, Apple did not cite any scientific evidence to back up its claims that bringing attention to the breath can help decrease stress and alleviate anxiety. However, research does exist to support the claim.

Breath-based meditation has been shown to reduce activity in the brain's "default mode network" (DMN), an area implicated in mind-wandering and the sense of self. Increased activity in this "resting state" network is known to be associated with conditions such as depression and anxiety.

Recent neuroimaging studies have also shown that daily meditation alters the functional and structural plasticity of the brain, and can increase cortical thickness in specific brain regions associated with attention-based tasks.

The Breathe app is part of watchOS 3, which will be released as a free upgrade this fall.

Article Link: watchOS 3: Bringing Attention Back to Apple's New 'Breathe' App
 
How'd you get that privated Apple video MacRumours?? Also I can already hear the "such innovation" sarcasm
 
It also has a "weekly summary" notification on a Monday morning similar to the activity summary.
 
A lot of people are not going to like the mandala or anything related to mindfulness. People in Cupertino probably aren't aware of how some Americans feel about that. I've met someone who think the mandala is a form of idolatry sent by the Devil to distract Christians from their religion and someone who believes mindfulness goes against the teaching to not lean on your understanding but onto God's. Just saying it exists. Not judging.

My problem with these apps (I had a breathing one on the Mac) is that what they consider slow is fast for me. I must breathe really slowly--when I try to keep up with their slow relaxing pace I get light headed.
 
Funny, I'm a conditioned athlete but one thing I don't like to think about is breathing. Thinking about breathing makes it more difficult and can even be a little 'panic-ish' at times.
 
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I would have thought modulating the heart rate, which is easier to measure accurately than breathing, would have been a better way of training mindfulness. Quite apart from anything, slowing breathing down improperly can create a CO2 signal that can trigger panic. Still, it is an interesting idea. Given that depression is second in terms of global years-of-life-disability, anything that helps people manage the anxiety and mood would be huge.
 
Funny, I'm a conditioned athlete but one thing I don't like to think about is breathing. Thinking about breathing makes it more difficult and can even be a little 'panic-ish' at times.

As I understand it, the idea is to be aware of the breath, not to think about it. It's meant to reduce mind-wandering and improve attentional focus. Apparently, a lot of tennis players use a similar method.
 
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While this might not make so much sense at first, it's actually a good "exercise" against stress. It's not the breathing itself, but the fact, that you clear your mind to focus on breathing/your body for a full minute and -and maybe at the same time give it an oxygen boost by deeply breathing. Even better if you do it outdoor instead of your office. Helps clearing the mind and usually the air is better... ;)
Nice feature, but you don't need any kind of device for that... >_>
 
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This seems like the type of thing a company comes up with when they've run out of ideas for anything new, IMHO.
A company comes up with a new idea because its run out of new ideas? I think commenters go more nutty every year. You can predict to a t the responses every year along the lines of, Apple is doomed, this wouldn't have happened if Steve jobs was around, I won't buy this unless they do xyz and want everyone to know, Apple should stop changing things so quickly, Apple should change things more quickly, its simply hilarious since all the commenters are android trolls or Apple customers who end up buying the product anyway just so they have something to complain about. Gotta love it.
 
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