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The BrushO handle does the heavy lifting — sensing motion, classifying zones, and delivering real-time pressure alerts through its LED ring. But the companion app is where the data becomes actionable. It is not a dashboard you need to stare at while brushing; it is a post-session review tool that...

The BrushO handle does the heavy lifting — sensing motion, classifying zones, and delivering real-time pressure alerts through its LED ring. But the companion app is where the data becomes actionable. It is not a dashboard you need to stare at while brushing; it is a post-session review tool that surfaces patterns you would otherwise never see. Here is how to read every screen and what each metric actually means for your oral health.
The brushing score — a number from 0 to 100 displayed prominently after every session — is the most visible metric in the app and the easiest to misunderstand. It is not a grade of your oral hygiene. It is a composite of three sub-scores: coverage, pressure, and duration. Each is weighted roughly equally, though coverage and pressure receive marginally higher weight than pure duration.
Coverage (40% of total score) measures how many of the 16 standard oral zones received at least the minimum recommended brushing time, typically 5 to 7 seconds per zone. A zone that receives zero seconds of brushing counts heavily against your score; a zone that receives 3 seconds counts partially; a zone that receives 5 seconds or more counts as fully covered. The coverage metric is designed to penalize neglect more harshly than it rewards over-brushing — spending 30 seconds on your front teeth does not compensate for spending zero seconds on your lower molars.
Pressure (35% of total score) measures the percentage of brushing time spent within the safe pressure range, approximately 100 to 250 grams of force. Time spent below 100 grams (too light to effectively disrupt plaque biofilm) and time spent above 250 grams (risk of gingival recession and enamel abrasion) both reduce this sub-score. The pressure sensor samples at approximately 100 Hz, so even brief bursts of excessive pressure are captured.
Duration (25% of total score) measures how close you came to the recommended two-minute session. Brushing for 1 minute and 45 seconds earns a high duration sub-score. Brushing for 45 seconds does not.
Together, these three sub-scores produce a number that rewards comprehensive, gentle, adequately-timed brushing. A score of 85 or above consistently is excellent. A score that bounces between 60 and 95 from session to session suggests inconsistency — you brush well when you are focused and poorly when you are distracted. A score persistently below 60 indicates one or more specific deficits worth investigating in the zone map.
The zone map is the most diagnostically useful screen in the app. It displays a stylized dental arch divided into 16 zones: four quadrants (upper right, upper left, lower right, lower left), each subdivided into buccal (cheek-side), lingual (tongue-side), and occlusal (biting surface) regions, with the anterior (front) teeth forming two additional zones.
Each zone is color-coded: green for adequately brushed (5+ seconds), yellow for under-brushed (2-5 seconds), and red for missed (less than 2 seconds). Tapping any zone reveals the exact brushing duration, the average pressure in that zone, and — over time — a trend line showing whether your coverage of that zone is improving, stable, or declining.
The most common pattern the zone map reveals is lingual neglect: the tongue-side surfaces of the teeth, particularly the lower incisors, consistently show yellow or red even when buccal surfaces are solidly green. This is not a personal failing; it is a near-universal human tendency, driven by the biomechanical awkwardness of accessing the lingual surfaces with a brush handle. The zone map makes this invisible neglect visible, and simply knowing it exists is often enough to prompt behavioral correction.
A second common pattern is handedness bias: right-handed brushers tend to under-brush the upper right buccal surfaces (which require an awkward wrist angle), while left-handed brushers show the mirror-image pattern on the upper left. The app does not call this out explicitly, but it becomes obvious when you review two weeks of zone maps side by side.
Beneath the zone map, the pressure timeline displays a scrolling graph of pressure over the two-minute session, color-coded by zone. Each vertical band represents a different oral zone, and the height of the waveform shows the force applied. Spikes above the green "safe zone" band indicate moments of excessive pressure, and the zone color tells you where it happened.
This screen is particularly valuable for users who have been told by their dentist that they are brushing too hard — a surprisingly common clinical finding, affecting an estimated 10 to 20 percent of adults. The pressure timeline lets you see exactly when and where you apply excessive force, and over weeks, a downward trend in peak pressure is one of the most meaningful improvements the app can track.
The Trends tab aggregates your brushing data into weekly and monthly views. The primary chart shows your average brushing score over time, plotted as a bar chart with a moving average line. A flat or declining trend suggests that your technique has plateaued and may benefit from deliberate focus on a specific metric — for example, targeting coverage on your weakest zone for a week.
Secondary charts break out average pressure, average duration, and zone coverage completeness as separate trend lines. The zone coverage trend is particularly useful: even if your overall score is high, a gradual decline in coverage on a specific quadrant or surface may signal a developing problem before it shows up at a dental exam.
The weekly summary also includes a "Streak" counter — the number of consecutive days on which you completed at least one full two-minute brushing session. While gamification is not a substitute for technique, behavioral research consistently shows that streak-based motivation improves compliance with daily health behaviors, and oral hygiene is no exception.
The app allows you to set custom brushing goals: a target score, a minimum number of sessions per day, or a specific zone you want to improve coverage on. These goals appear as gentle nudges — a notification at your usual brushing time, a summary of yesterday's performance — rather than aggressive alerts. You can also set brushing reminders with customizable time windows (morning between 7:00 and 9:00 AM, evening between 9:00 and 11:00 PM) and days of the week, accommodating shift workers and anyone with an irregular schedule.
The app's philosophy is to inform, not nag. The data is there when you want it, the trends speak for themselves, and the feedback loop between seeing a zone map with a red quadrant and fixing it in the next session is, for most users, intrinsically motivating. You do not need a push notification to care about a missed zone when you can see it in color, labeled with your name, on a screen you already check twice a day.
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