How you sleep is tied to memory, mood, blood pressure, blood sugar, and whether you can show up for the people and activities that matter to you. For years, though, the tools we’ve had to measure sleep and long-term health risk have been fairly blunt: “how many hours,” questionnaires, or a diagnosis like sleep apnea.
Now something new is arriving: large AI models that look at every second of your sleep study and try to map that pattern to future health. One of the latest examples is the 2026 project, SleepFM—developed by a multi-institution collaboration including researchers at Stanford & Harvard.
SleepFM is a “foundation model” trained on more than half a million hours of clinical polysomnography (full overnight sleep studies with EEG, breathing, heart rhythm, and more).
From one overnight sleep study, it can estimate risk for conditions ranging from dementia to heart failure and all-cause mortality.
At the same time, other human studies are sharpening the picture of which features of sleep matter most in later life: how much deep slow-wave sleep you get, how stable your emotional brain feels after sleep, and how “old” or “young” your brain looks.
In this article, we’ll cover:
How the 2026 SleepFM study uses one overnight sleep study to predict risk for about 130 conditions, including dementia and cardiovascular disease.
What new work in older adults shows about deep non-REM slow-wave sleep and anxiety, and why that matters for brain aging..
How slow-wave sleep loss over years relates to your chance of developing dementia in late life.
How deep-learning models that estimate your “sleep age” from overnight studies connect to life expectancy.
All of this will stay grounded in what you can actually do with this knowledge: how to think about getting a sleep study, how to protect the parts of sleep that seem most tightly linked to brain and heart health, and how to view these new AI tools in a measured helpful way.
Let’s get started.