Underwear Sensor Measures Flatulence for Scientific Atlas 🤯

Published on February 26, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

Science is venturing into a little-explored territory: the objective measurement of intestinal gases. Researchers from the University of Maryland have created a wearable sensor that attaches to underwear to record human flatulence 24 hours a day. This project, named Human Flatus Atlas, aims to overcome the limitations of self-reports and obtain reliable data. The first results indicate an average of 32 daily expulsions in healthy adults.

Portable sensor in underwear records and analyzes the frequency of human flatulence for a detailed scientific study.

The Technical Development of the Sensor and Its Function 🔬

The device is designed to be discreet and functional. It incorporates gas sensors, an accelerometer to detect specific movements, and a memory unit. Data is recorded continuously and then transferred for analysis, distinguishing real events from false positives. The technical goal is to create a passive monitoring system that allows correlating gas production with diet or health conditions, laying the foundations for a reference atlas of this biomarker.

The Underwear That Does More Than Cover Your Butt 😄

Now your underwear won't just be your second skin, but also your most direct scientific confidant. Imagine the chat with the device: Today you've been quite effervescent after the fabada. This technology promises to end subjectivities in the matter, offering raw data on a topic about which, until now, we only had unreliable and embarrassed testimonies. A firm step toward gaseous truth.