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Apple Watch, Fitbit, Garmin — AI is watching your heart rate, sleep, steps, even stress. Cool when it is helpful, weird when it gets data wrong.
Fitness trackers use AI to interpret what your body is doing. It is mostly accurate but not always. And the data goes to the company — which is a privacy thing to think about.
If you have a fitness tracker, look at what data it has on you. With a parent, check the privacy settings. Decide together what data you are comfortable sharing.
Try this with a school, hobby, or family example where the stakes are low. Use the AI output as a draft you can question, not as the final answer.
15 questions · take it digitally for instant feedback at tendril.neural-forge.io/learn/quiz/end-builders-healthcare-AI-fitness-trackers
Which body measurement do most fitness trackers analyze to estimate your sleep stages?
Why do fitness trackers often give inaccurate step counts when you ride a bike?
What real-world outcome has been documented with Apple's irregular heart rhythm detection?
What do fitness trackers provide when they detect something unusual?
Where does most of the data collected by your fitness tracker end up?
Based on the lesson, what can subtle changes in your fitness data sometimes predict?
What should you do if your fitness tracker keeps flagging the same health concern?
Why might a fitness tracker miscount your steps while you are skateboarding?
What is a major privacy concern mentioned in the lesson about fitness trackers?
How accurate is AI at estimating sleep stages from fitness tracker data?
What should you do about occasional weird readings from your fitness tracker?
What does a fitness tracker analyze to detect irregular heart rhythms?
Why is heart rate variation important for tracking sleep?
Which company was mentioned as having a feature that has saved lives?
What is NOT something fitness tracker AI is designed to do?