The Science Behind ONVY
Our AI health intelligence is grounded in peer-reviewed research across sleep science, exercise physiology, stress management, cognitive performance, and behavioral psychology.
Scientific Knowledge & Validation
At ONVY, we believe that trust begins with science. Our platform is built not only on cutting-edge AI, but also on a rigorous scientific foundation that ensures every insight and recommendation is both credible and actionable.
Every element of our health intelligence is continuously validated by our medical and scientific advisory board. This unique combination of academic rigor and medical expertise ensures that ONVY is not only technically advanced, but scientifically reliable.
ONVY uses a scientific workflow: hypothesis → algorithm → validation (medical oversight & user data) → refinement. This cycle ensures our recommendations stay up to date and clinically relevant. Unlike most wellness platforms, ONVY’s metrics are not just based on algorithms — they are tested, reviewed, and approved by experts from medicine, sports science, and human performance.
ONVY's Scientific & Medical Advisory Board

Dr. Frank Styra
Medical Advisor
Supervising orthopedist & surgeon at Olympic center in Bavaria, Germany. Specialist in the treatment of competitive athletes with focus on sports medicine, chirotherapy, acupuncture, osteopathy, and minimal invasive pain therapy.

Dr. Mohammed Enayat
Precision Health Advisor
Physician, Founder & Health Futurist at the intersection of human performance, longevity and personalized healthcare. Founder of HUM2N, applying longevity science and a real-time physiology approach to engineer vitality, longevity and early disease resolution. Founder & CEO of LMS Health.

Dr. Reiner Kraft
Technical & Scientific Advisor
Former Silicon Valley CTO now helping Technology Leaders to increase their self-awareness, resilience & energy levels while being a sparring partner to build impactful and purposeful tech organizations. Founder of The Mindful Leader and the Fellowship of Mindful Tech Leaders. Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Dr. Ian Tennant
Human and Environmental Health Advisor
Designs and delivers research on how to harness a type of body awareness known as interoception to help improve mental and physical wellbeing. Runs a clinic offering manual therapy, health mentoring and group sessions for body awareness and movement.
Key Research Areas
Sleep Science
Multi-sensor sleep detection, sleep deprivation effects on cognition, and sleep hygiene for athletic recovery.
Cognitive Performance
Cognitive fitness frameworks, flow state research, and mindfulness effects on psychological health.
Exercise & Well-being
Physical activity effects on cognitive functioning, subjective well-being, and stress reduction in populations.
Mindfulness & Stress
Mindfulness-based stress reduction, self-control moderation, and chronic stress cortisol dysfunction.
Wearable Validation
Systematic reviews on consumer wearable heart rate device validity and multi-sensor approaches.
Mental Health in Athletics
IOC consensus on mental health in elite athletes and tracking mental well-being through technology.
Selected Publications
Nature Human Behaviour (2021)
van Agteren et al. — Systematic review and meta-analysis of psychological interventions to improve mental wellbeing.
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience (2020)
Aidman — Cognitive Fitness Framework for assessing and training high-performance cognition.
Sensors (2021)
Altini & Kinnunen — The Promise of Sleep: Multi-sensor approach for accurate sleep stage detection using the Oura Ring.
Scientific Reports (2021)
Csipo et al. — Sleep deprivation impairs cognitive performance and alters task-associated cerebral blood flow.
Sports Medicine (2018)
Cunanan et al. — The General Adaptation Syndrome: A foundation for periodization.
British Journal of Sports Medicine (2019)
Reardon et al. — Mental Health in Elite Athletes: International Olympic Committee Consensus Statement.
Frontiers in Psychology (2018)
Mandolesi et al. — Effects of physical exercise on cognitive functioning and wellbeing.
British Journal of Sports Medicine (2021)
Mühlen et al. — Recommendations for determining the validity of consumer wearable heart rate devices.