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A new device developed by researchers at the University of Texas at Austin looks like a tattoo and measures brain activity.
A new wave of skin-integrated wearables is turning our faces into dashboards and mental health into a real-time data stream.
Researchers introduce a wire forehead e-tattoo using EEG and EOG to measure brain activity and cognitive performance analysis ...
Currently, the e-tattoo only works on hairless skin but there is work to try and make the device more accessible, combining ...
A subject wearing the e-tattoo while answering test questions. Credit: Device H Huh et al. Get the Popular Science daily newsletter💡 Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent every weekday.
New face tattoo protects your brain from working too hard, scientists say - Sensors could help safety by tracking mental ...
Credit: G. Mangiapane et al. An 800-year-old mummy donated to a museum in Italy a century ago has revealed new clues about ancient face tattoos. But the mummy's origin remains shrouded in mystery.
A newly developed face tattoo can see when the brain is working too hard – which it probably is, according to the researchers who developed it. The new electronic device sits on the face and is ...
or "e-tattoo," on the person's face. In a study posted in the science journal Device, the team of researchers wrote that they found e-tattoos to be a more cost-effective and simpler way to track ...
They were surprised to find tattoos on both cheeks of the mummy’s face, including three straight running lines from the ear to the mouth. They also found a wrist tattoo in the shape of an S.
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