Dhyana, an Indian fitness wearables start-up endorsed by badminton legend Pullela Gopichand and Olympic gold medallist Abhinav Bindra has officially publicised the second edition of its ultra-light unibody aluminium ring, which acts as a health-tracker.
{alcircleadd}This feather-like unibody aluminium ring has to be on your fingers while performing vital bodily functions. The Dhyana ring is the only miniature continuous heart rate variability (HRV) monitoring device in the world and the first of its kind.
Dhyana’s MD, Bhairav Shankar quoted: “The first version of Dhyana was focused on measuring mindfulness during meditation. Our new updated version is a complete game-changer; it’s designed to be worn the whole day, helping users track their inner balance continuously.”
Along with monitoring heart rate, the aluminium ring also features essential applications like sleep and activity trackers. It helps the user in meditation while tracking calorie intake, blood oxygen rate (SpO2) and other metabolic activities.
Dhyana’s specialised algorithms make the ring compatible with numerous fitness applications.
Abhinav Bindra boosting Dhyana’s confidence declared that the ring could have helped him sufficiently when he was vigorously training to be a shooter, but, unfortunately, it was not available back then.
“When I was training to be a shooter, I wish I had a Dhyana ring. The fact that it can instantly show me how my mind is being disturbed is just amazing,” exclaimed Abhinav Bindra, who has actively participated in the product evolution and offered his first-hand knowledge in maintaining inner balance.
After its inception in 2020, Dhyana was anointed as the official meditation partner by the Indian Olympic Association for the 2020 Tokyo games.
It is intriguing to learn that almost 60 per cent of the citizens testing the device did not quit using it at all, even after the tests concluded.
The first edition of Dhyana’s ring was utilised abundantly by both the Gopichand Academy in Hyderabad, India and the Neuromeditation Institute in Oregon, USA, to evaluate the consequences of HRV on people’s subconscious minds at varying interludes, like, before a workout or post action.
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