Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. Computing
  4. News

Listening to you speak could help reveal stress, depression, and even heart conditions

Add as a preferred source on Google

Can the same technology which analyzes emotion in voices also be used to identify health-related issues, ranging from stress and depression to heart conditions? That’s the question being asked as part of a collaboration between voice-driven emotions analytics company Beyond Verbal and researchers at leading global medical institutions, including the Mayo Clinic.

Their answer? An optimistic ‘yes.’

Recommended Videos

Over the past 21 years, Beyond Verbal has gathered an impressive broad dataset of 2.5 million emotion-tagged voices in upwards of 40 different languages. The idea is that, working with its medical partners, it can use the power of machine learning and big data to also examine the connection between vocal intonations and health issues.

“We are not calling what we’re doing right now diagnostics,” Yuval Mor, CEO of Beyond Verbal, told Digital Trends. “Instead, it’s about long-term monitoring and decision support systems. The diagnostic tools that a doctor can use right now can do a better job than we can with vocal markers. However, what we’re doing is to use voice abnormalities observed over time to say that your voice is significantly different from how it sounded yesterday, a week ago, or two months ago — and then to correlate those changes with specific things we can identify.”

The ability to recognize certain conditions based on voice is not new, and nor does it always require a machine. Listening to a person speak can be used to help reveal that they may be suffering from certain conditions, such as dementia or Parkinson’s disease. However, machine learning tools can be used to go further — by dialing in on granular details which may not be readily observable to the human ear.

In particular, what Beyond Verbal is hoping to do is expand this recognition to medical and physiological conditions which are not associated with the brain.

“That’s where this work is becoming very fascinating, and that’s what we’ve been working with the Mayo Clinic over the past two years to do,” Mor said. This may include the diagnosis of coronary artery disease, for example, which Mor said is something that is being looked at very closely.

Right now, the so-called Beyond Health Research Platform is still rolling out, but Mor noted that collaborators are certainly thinking big with the project.

“The long-term vision is that everyone will have their own companion, a guardian angel, which could be anything from your mobile phone to your Amazon Echo,” he said. “It might be that it monitors your phone conversations, or that you speak to an app for 30 seconds every morning — and from that it gives you high-level indications. You either get a green light saying everything is okay, a yellow light saying it’s worth monitoring closely, or a red light telling you that something is significantly different and it can be mapped to a specific condition, so you should go see your doctor.”

Coming soon to a device near you? We certainly hope so. In the meantime, this is a fascinating piece of research we’ll be sure to keep our eyes on.

Luke Dormehl
I'm a UK-based tech writer covering Cool Tech at Digital Trends. I've also written for Fast Company, Wired, the Guardian…
Brazil’s secret World Cup weapon taught the team when to ignore it
The data said he wasn't running enough. The footage said he was always in the “perfect tactical position.”
Soccer ball in net

Brazil has more World Cup titles than anyone, five of them to be precise, but after going through five straight tournaments without adding to that count, the team is leaning hard on data this time. 

Every player wears a sensor-packed "smart vest" tracking field position (via GPS), heart rate, and a stat called "player load," the same kind of numbers that your Whoop band or Apple Watch brags about, but tuned specifically for the sport.

Read more
New OLED breakthrough could make the next see-through screen actually worth using
The electrode fix that could finally make see-through screens worth looking at.
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware

Every transparent OLED demo I’ve seen so far looks amazing for about ten seconds, right before I notice how dim or smudgy it actually looks. A big part of the problem is the role that electrodes play in the design. 

A transparent display requires a see-through electrode that sits on top of incredibly delicate organic light-emitting layers. However, most of the usual options either conduct electricity poorly or risk damaging those layers during manufacturing. 

Read more
This jacket pulls drinking water straight from the air
Engineers at UT Austin have developed a wearable textile that harvests ambient moisture into drinkable water.
Image showing person wearing a jacket with special fiber that pulls water from air

Engineers at the University of Texas at Austin have built a jacket that pulls drinkable water directly from the air, offering a potential solution for hikers, soldiers, agricultural workers, and emergency responders who operate far from reliable water sources.

How the jacket collects water

Read more