Regulation Score
Daily nervous system summary (0–100)
- Combines HRV, RHR, sleep, and respiratory rate into one score
- 70–100: Balanced & restorative
- 50–69: Steady but watchful
- 0–49: Elevated stress — prioritize recovery
Your nervous system constantly adapts to stress and recovery. These five signals — and the practices that move them — are the foundation of SoMana. Every claim below is anchored in peer-reviewed research.
Five signals SoMana tracks from Apple Health — and what each one actually tells you.
Daily nervous system summary (0–100)
Autonomic nervous system adaptability
Baseline cardiovascular load
Foundation for nervous system recovery
Breaths per minute, autonomic signal
Every practice inside SoMana is grounded in published research. Below are the studies that inform what we build. Filter by intervention to find the ones that matter to you.
Voluntary slow breathing leads to an increase in parasympathetic nervous control of the heart, with increased RMSSD during practice, immediately after, and after multi-week interventions.
4 weeks of daily resonance breathing significantly improved HRV parameters (SDNN, pNN50, total power), cognitive performance, and reduced perceived stress.
Breathing at resonance frequency resulted in higher LF/HF ratio, more positive mood, and decreased blood pressure response to stress compared to controls.
Small RCT of combat veterans found mantram repetition produced large effect sizes on PTSD severity (d = -0.72), psychological distress (d = -0.73), and quality of life (d = 0.70).
Significant increases in RMSSD, RR interval, and HF power, with reduced LF and LF/HF ratio persisting up to 15 minutes after cold exposure.
Cold facial stimulus induced parasympathetic activation, improved stress recovery, and significantly reduced cortisol increase after acute stress.
8 weeks of gratitude journaling increased parasympathetic HRV and reduced inflammatory biomarkers compared to treatment as usual.
Physical activity significantly improved RR interval, SDNN, RMSSD, and HF power, especially in patients with chronic heart failure.
Meta-analysis of 20 RCTs showed journaling interventions resulted in 5% greater reduction in mental health symptom scores compared to controls.
Endurance, multimodal, and coordinative training improve cardiac autonomic control and cardiovascular health factors in older adults.
5 minutes per day of cyclic sighing over 28 days improved mood and lowered resting respiratory rate more than mindfulness meditation, box breathing, or cyclic hyperventilation.
Comprehensive review showing slow breathing (< 10 breaths/min) increases parasympathetic activity, improves emotional control, and shifts CNS activity toward relaxation and well-being.
Higher gratitude scores correlated with better sleep, less depressed mood, less fatigue, better cardiac self-efficacy, and lower inflammatory biomarkers in Stage B heart failure patients.
Systematic review of gratitude RCTs in working populations found perceived stress and depression improved significantly across the trials measuring those outcomes, with positive affect gains across additional trials.
Forty-year bibliometric review of the Pennebaker paradigm documents expressive writing's effects on immune function, fewer health-center visits, reduced anxiety, and mediated depression symptoms across decades of studies.
Meta-analysis found written emotional expression produced an effect size of d = 0.47, equating to roughly a 23% improvement over controls across reported physical health, psychological well-being, physiological functioning, and general functioning.
Meta-analysis of 24 RCTs comparing positive writing to trauma-focused expressive writing found positive writing produced greater mood and cognitive gains in general populations, while expressive writing helped clinical patients more.
Both rosary prayer and yoga mantras independently slowed breathing to ~6 breaths/minute, synchronizing cardiovascular rhythms and significantly increasing baroreflex sensitivity.
Two-site RCT of 173 veterans found the Mantram Repetition Program produced significantly greater hyperarousal reductions than Present-Centered Therapy (d = 0.57 post-treatment, 0.52 at follow-up), and hyperarousal reduction mediated other PTSD gains.
Consensus white paper framing interoception as a transdiagnostic mechanism across anxiety, mood, eating, addictive, and somatic-symptom disorders. Sharper interoceptive awareness is linked to better emotional regulation.
Development and validation of the MAIA, a 32-item self-report questionnaire across 8 dimensions of interoceptive body awareness; now the standard measurement instrument used to study body-based interventions.
First RCT of Somatic Experiencing (n=63 with full DSM PTSD): large effects on PTSD symptom severity (Cohen's d = 0.94–1.26) and depression (d = 0.7–1.08); 44.1% no longer met PTSD criteria post-treatment, with gains held at follow-up.
Comprehensive review proposing that sustained contemplative practice may reshape how the brain integrates interoceptive signals over time, linked to long-term improvements in mental health and psychological well-being.
No studies match that filter.
These studies demonstrate measurable physiological improvements from the practices integrated in SoMana. Research consistently shows that simple, consistent interventions can significantly enhance autonomic nervous system function.
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