Skin Conductance

Skin conductance is a measure of sweat gland activity, where skin resistance to electric current is used to detect changes in physiological arousal. It is commonly used to measure emotional and cognitive responses and has applications in user experience research, psychology, and medicine. Skin conductance has become an important tool in the study of emotional states, allowing the response to a stimulus to be quantified and compared to the emotional state of an individual before and after the stimulus. Additionally, it has been used to help detect heart rate variability to diagnose sleep apnea.

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Related Articles

4 article(s) found

The Combination of Fractionated Erbium:YAG Laser Skin Microporation and Topical Imiquimod Is A New, Safe And Efficient Strategy for the Treatment of Actinic Keratosis and Basal Cell Carcinoma: Report of Two Pilot Studies

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Ulceration of Breast’s Skin due to Topical Corticosteroid Abuse

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Synthesis and Analysis of Copper Neem (Azadirechta Indica) Soap-Nitro and Ethoxy Benzothiazole Complexes for Anti-Bacterial Activity Related with Skin Diseases

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Elasticity Profile of Skin, Neuronal, Cardiac, and Skeletal Muscle Cells after Treatment with the Biofield Energy Healing-Based Proprietary Test Formulation

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