Science E-tattoos could make mobile EEGs a reality - Novel polymer-based conductive inks print directly on the scalp surface—even through pesky short hairs.

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Jennifer Ouellette – Dec 5, 2024

etattooCROP-A.jpg
New conductive e-tattoo can detect brain waves

A 3D-printable EEG electrode e-tattoo.

Epidermal electronics attached to the skin via temporary tattoos (e-tattoos) have been around for more than a decade, but they have their limitations, most notably that they don't function well on curved and/or hairy surfaces. Scientists have now developed special conductive inks that can be printed right onto a person's scalp to measure brain waves, even if they have hair. According to a new paper published in the journal Cell Biomaterials, this could one day enable mobile EEG monitoring outside a clinical setting, among other potential applications.

EEGs are a well-established, non-invasive method for recording the electrical activity of the brain, a crucial diagnostic tool for monitoring such conditions as epilepsy, sleep disorders, and brain injuries. It's also an important tool in many aspects of neuroscience research, including the ongoing development of brain-computer interfaces (BCIs). But there are issues. Subjects must wear uncomfortable caps that aren't designed to handle the variation in people's' head shapes, so a clinician must painstakingly map out the electrode positions on a given patient's head—a time-consuming process. And the gel used to apply the electrodes dries out and loses conductivity within a couple of hours, limiting how long one can make recordings.

By contrast, e-tattoos connect to skin without adhesives, are practically unnoticeable, and are typically attached via temporary tattoo, allowing electrical measurements (and other measurements, such as temperature and strain) using ultra-thin polymers with embedded circuit elements. They can measure heartbeats on the chest (ECG), muscle contractions in the leg (EMG), stress levels, and alpha waves through the forehead (EEG), for example.

Ink masters​

Yet even e-tattoos have their challenges, such as the aforementioned curved or hairy surfaces, as well as requiring personalized electrode placement design to cover larger areas since biosignals are spatially distributed. So scientists at the University of Texas at Austin and the University of California, Los Angeles, decided to explore the potential of on-tissue printing. Prior work in this area has focused on things like bio-printing hydrogels embedded with cells for tissue regeneration or as strain sensors.

etattoo2.jpg
Graphical abstract of on-scalp printing of the EEG e-tattoos.

The UTA/UCLA team developed printable biocompatible polymer-based inks that can be applied directly via microjet through short hair onto a lightly moistened scalp. The ink then quickly dries into a soft, stretchable, and conductive, thin film that conforms perfectly to the shape of the scalp. The ink comes in two varieties: one to form electrodes to pick up EEG signals and the other to form highly conductive interconnects that also minimize noise in the readings.

First, a camera is used to map the patient's head, and an algorithm designs the sensor placement to match that and provide instructions to a robotic microjet printer about where to deposit the ink. The printer deposits the ink with sufficient speed to penetrate short hairs on the scalp. There are also short cables that link the printed e-tattoo to a small EEG recorder. Their e-tattoos successfully recorded brain waves from participating subjects.

"This design is ultra-low-profile, mechanically imperceptible to the user," said co-author José del R. Millán of the University of Texas at Austin, a prominent expert in BCIs. "The fact that this device requires less setup and maintenance and the user could eventually wear a hat or a helmet over it means we could achieve longer recording times and learn more about their brain activity.”

This new method still requires a certain time commitment from patients, but it is considerably less time-consuming than a standard EEG, and it's cheaper. Right now, it only works with very short hair, so the group's future efforts will focus on improving the application method for longer, thicker hairs, as well as curly hair. (The latter is often an issue for Black patients requiring EEGs since curly hair can push against the cap and reduce contact between the scalp and the electrodes.) They might try robotic fingers or special combs to separate the hair during printing.

The ink also tends to rub off while the patient is sleeping or showering, so the team will also be looking to increase overall robustness and the ink's resistance to friction. One day, the applications might extend not just to EEGs, ECGs, BCIs, and the like but also make it possible to integrate sensors onto internal organs: the cranium, the heart, or on tissue or bone for regenerative purposes.

"Ultimately, it opens the door for the on-body integration of sensing, processing, communication, and power components tailored specifically to the anatomy and needs of the user," the authors concluded.

DOI: Cell Biomaterials, 2024. 10.1016/j.celbio.2024.100004 (About DOIs).
 
Looks very cyberpunk-ish but how does this help, again?

If you can't get cool augmentations then there's really no point of it.
 
Beyond limited medical applications, this shit should be banned.

I am with you on this, but honestly this is entering a level of Tech is about to outpace legislation again by a factor of 10 that we haven't seen before that will make the birth of the internet look tame in comparison.

If this can be used to let someone walk who was a paraplegic, that's a wonderful thing - but this could so easily be abused - we are entering a era (early days but still we're now on the path) for having "Wetware developers" and that's got all kinds of moral an ethical considerations that will just be ignored, let alone if barries to entry become nothing and you get Indian dev level of this stuff and it works fine until you try an do something and end up crashing your brain with a computer it's irritating but a restart will fix or a rebuild at worst it but your brain? yea that's not so simple.
 
I am with you on this, but honestly this is entering a level of Tech is about to outpace legislation again by a factor of 10 that we haven't seen before that will make the birth of the internet look tame in comparison.
I don't even really understand the tech just that it is a big deal.
If this can be used to let someone walk who was a paraplegic, that's a wonderful thing
Absolutely, granted I have no clue how but God bless anyone who could pull that off.
but this could so easily be abused - we are entering a era (early days but still we're now on the path) for having "Wetware developers" and that's got all kinds of moral an ethical considerations that will just be ignored, let alone if barries to entry become nothing and you get Indian dev level of this stuff and it works fine until you try an do something and end up crashing your brain with a computer it's irritating but a restart will fix or a rebuild at worst it but your brain? yea that's not so simple.
What is wetware?
 
What is wetware?

It's a kind of Generic term for "Software but for the brain" it rose to prominance in a lot of cyber punk and some harder sci-fi.

Absolutely, granted I have no clue how but God bless anyone who could pull that off.

Best example I can come up with is something like from the Expanse TV show, where there is a small implant that allows the signals from the brain to jump over the break in the spine, or from the books where it allows the injured person to drive a exo-suit.

I don't even really understand the tech just that it is a big deal.

As in the hard an fact facts I don't know myself just generality it's worrying, I have a very minimal understanding of it with micro probes in the brain picking up signals from the brain an transmitting them to the connected device, and the same back (at the moment really rough like X grip force is stressful etc) but like all things it's a start where once the flood gate is open other people run with it an it snowballs.
We don't know how the brain and the central nervous system works in a very fundamental level however we are starting to be able to interact with it and manipulate it, like a Drug that's really common for a while that's beneficial to someone for Blood Pressure etc but we find out 20 years down the line it causes a rare an aggressive cancer - now apply that sort of reasoning to this Tech. It might let someone regain movement but it comes at the cost of 10 years later is burns out the neural pathways for eyesight (at best) or it starts to inhibit autonomic functions like breathing, and people start dropping dead etc.

I'm not against progress but we are not at the point where this is ready for experimental trials on humans, or primates, hell we are barely at the Rat level but this is a tech that's going far an a way outside of what the law is able to control and it's going to snowball an snowball fast.
 
It's a kind of Generic term for "Software but for the brain" it rose to prominance in a lot of cyber punk and some harder sci-fi.

Best example I can come up with is something like from the Expanse TV show, where there is a small implant that allows the signals from the brain to jump over the break in the spine, or from the books where it allows the injured person to drive a exo-suit.

As in the hard an fact facts I don't know myself just generality it's worrying, I have a very minimal understanding of it with micro probes in the brain picking up signals from the brain an transmitting them to the connected device, and the same back (at the moment really rough like X grip force is stressful etc) but like all things it's a start where once the flood gate is open other people run with it an it snowballs

We don't know how the brain and the central nervous system works in a very fundamental level however we are starting to be able to interact with it and manipulate it, like a Drug that's really common for a while that's beneficial to someone for Blood Pressure etc but we find out 20 years down the line it causes a rare an aggressive cancer - now apply that sort of reasoning to this Tech. It might let someone regain movement but it comes at the cost of 10 years later is burns out the neural pathways for eyesight (at best) or it starts to inhibit autonomic functions like breathing, and people start dropping dead etc.
I barely understand this but then again I suck at tech. Hell I didn't even know wat a VPN was until like two years ago but that sounds very interesting and advanced.
I'm not against progress but we are not at the point where this is ready for experimental trials on humans, or primates, hell we are barely at the Rat level but this is a tech that's going far an a way outside of what the law is able to control and it's going to snowball an snowball fast.
I tghink the fact that we agree this is probably too far really says something. Nornally speaking I hate progress, especially social progress. On tech I'm a bit meh. But this makes methink think that Ted Kazwhatevert the fuck was right.
 
Its all fun and games until employers install emotion sensors into every headrest.
 
I barely understand this but then again I suck at tech. Hell I didn't even know wat a VPN was until like two years ago but that sounds very interesting and advanced.

No problem it's a VERY complex topic, I only know what little I do know about this because of various Medical Journals and Veterinary science books an publications my Mrs gets that I read - I try my best to understand but there is a lot I don't get but from what little I do get it's Technically positive i.e. "Oh hey we can do this" but very negative about the wider impact of this should it be applied to Humans.

I tghink the fact that we agree this is probably too far really says something. Nornally speaking I hate progress, especially social progress. On tech I'm a bit meh. But this makes methink think that Ted Kazwhatevert the fuck was right.

That's the thing, you don't have to be an expert on something to know it's a bad idea or run with something someone else breaks down into understandable chunks you can just bash together (like programming), for example I am brilliant at Mechanisms, Metallurgy, Material Science and there theoretical an applied forms it comes with my Job, BUT I am only OK with electronics.

I can wire simple household circuits together and build a computer an even identify an replace a component on a board an design simple circuits like a crystal radio etc but I am totally out my depth after that point and I don't even try to understand things, like electron pathing.

I can take Sand or other Earths an Rocks containing Iron that I can smelt from scratch and turn into pretty much anything you want, but I can't take sand, refine it an beat it into interesting shapes at a molecular level and then make it do interesting things with electrons an flow paths an logic gaits, I am an educated an skilled Man I can make you everything from a hammer to a fine time piece with my skills and could even do it from scratch with bootstrapping the tools along the way, but I can't make you a computer from scratch. But to get to this point where I can do this we didn't need to understand the science an couldn't for a very long time but we could get a result - that's where this is going we can have a massive impact before we understand the How an Why.

Now apply that to the human brain.
 
No problem it's a VERY complex topic,
I'm also kinda drunk lol. Like not really fucked up but not on my A gaame.
I only know what little I do know about this because of various Medical Journals and Veterinary science books an publications my Mrs gets that I read - I try my best to understand but there is a lot I don't get but from what little I do get it's Technically positive i.e. "Oh hey we can do this" but very negative about the wider impact of this should it be applied to Humans.
Oh shit you're married, good for you.
That's the thing, you don't have to be an expert on something to know it's a bad idea or run with something someone else breaks down into understandable chunks you can just bash together (like programming), for example I am brilliant at Mechanisms, Metallurgy, Material Science and there theoretical an applied forms it comes with my Job, BUT I am only OK with electronics.

I can wire simple household circuits together and build a computer an even identify an replace a component on a board an design simple circuits like a crystal radio etc but I am totally out my depth after that point and I don't even try to understand things, like electron pathing.

I can take Sand or other Earths an Rocks containing Iron that I can smelt from scratch and turn into pretty much anything you want, but I can't take sand, refine it an beat it into interesting shapes at a molecular level and then make it do interesting things with electrons an flow paths an logic gaits, I am an educated an skilled Man I can make you everything from a hammer to a fine time piece with my skills and could even do it from scratch with bootstrapping the tools along the way, but I can't make you a computer from scratch. But to get to this point where I can do this we didn't need to understand the science an couldn't for a very long time but we could get a result - that's where this is going we can have a massive impact before we understand the How an Why.

Now apply that to the human brain.
The only thing that makes me not totally freak out is because I lnow there is more thant he brain, that being the soul. And I mean you know I don't think God would hold you accountable for a sin commited due to a glitch or brain hack but ya know it is stilreally fucking scary. The brain is just so complex and iknteresting man. Like it's so weird and squishy looking but powerful.
 
Oh shit you're married, good for you.
Not quite, July next year - but we dated for 3 years about 15 years ago reconnected an have been together just shy of 4 for the second time now an we both regretted splitting up so 7 years (as a cumulative total) and very happybut other than on paper an doing the wold thing we consider ourselfs married, we bought a 25 acre property this year and everyone outside our immediate families think we're married for a long time.

I'm very happy an she is very happy, that's all that matters.

I'm also kinda drunk lol. Like not really fucked up but not on my A gaame.

I was a alcoholic for a long time I get that, an sadly I am taking some pain meds for back surgury an tapering off right now, trust me I get it mate.

The brain is just so complex and iknteresting man. Like it's so weird and squishy looking but powerful.

The Brain is amazing and how it works is worthy of respect and when it malfunctions is interesting and it's part of what got me into lolcows, I'm a people watcher by nature I guess and I like working out how people work an how that can go wrong - it's a fascinating subject. Especially when you add people into the mix who don't understand how other poeple or things work - it's almost an Anthropology experiment.
 
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