Saying one thing while feeling another is part of being human, but bottling up emotions can have serious psychological consequences like anxiety or panic attacks. To help health care providers tell the difference, a team led by scientists at Penn State has created a stretchable, rechargeable sticker that can detect real emotions - by measuring things like skin temperature and heart rate - even when users put on a brave face.
The researchers recently unveiled the wearable patch that can simultaneously and accurately track multiple emotional signals in a study published in the journal Nano Letters.
"This is a new and improved way to understand our emotions by looking at multiple body signals at once," said Huanyu "Larry" Cheng, the James L. Henderson, Jr. Memorial Associate Professor of Engineering Science and Mechanics at Penn State and lead author on the paper. "Relying only on facial expressions to understand emotions can be misleading. People often don't visibly show how they truly feel, so that's why we're combining facial expression analysis with other important physiological signals, which will ultimately lead to better mental health monitoring and support."