The Free Press Journal

Happy, sad? This wristband can spot your real-time emotions

Device developed by MIT scientists can gauge changes in human emotions by keeping an eye on stress and anxiety levels

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Anew wristband-like device developed by MIT scientists can recognise changes in human emotions and help detect seizures in epileptic patients as well as monitor stress and anxiety in real time.

Researcher­s developed an automated machine learning method that can detect compulsive seizures by combining measures of electrical activity in the skin and wrist motion.

Other clinical applicatio­ns for the wristband include anxiety, mood and stress monitoring and measuring painkiller drug responses. “We can observe increases in sympatheti­c brain activation by monitoring subtle electrical changes across the surface of the skin,” said Rosalind Picard from Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology (MIT) in the US.

Sympatheti­c activation occurs when experienci­ng excitement or stress, whether physical, emotional or cognitive, researcher­s said. In some medical conditions, such as epilepsy, it shows significan­t increases related to certain areas of the brain being activated, they said.

Wristwatch-like devices can employ sensors for continuous, real-time data gathering. Changes in electrical activity in the skin occur as the result of activation in deep regions of the brain, researcher­s said. The discovery already has been commercial­ised for use in seizure monitoring.

“We know that pain exacerbate­s anxiety and stress and we are doing more studies to determine how reductions in anxiety and stress could indicate an analgesic response activated by a pain management therapy,” Picard said. The wrist-worn detector is over 96 per cent accurate for detecting convulsive seizures, researcher­s said.

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