homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Your smartphone can tell when you're drunk -- and this might save lives

Smartphone accelerometers can record 'drunk gaits'.

Tibi Puiu
August 19, 2020 @ 8:54 pm

share Share

Credit: Pixabay.

Not everyone gets intoxicated from drinking the same amount of alcohol. Some feel tipsy after a single drink while other, more experienced, bar-hoppers can go shot after shot and still keep a straight face. However, once a person truly becomes intoxicated, it’s hard to keep it a secret — especially if you have to walk from point A to point B.

In a new study, researchers at Stanford University and the University of Pittsburgh have used smartphone built-in hardware to identify ‘drunken gaits’ with up to 92% accuracy. In the future, an app may be able to send notifications to intoxicated users that it is unsafe to drive or that they should be more careful in public, potentially saving lives.

The walk that doesn’t lie

The fact that a person’s gait can be tied to their level of alcohol toxicity is by no means a novelty. Police officers routinely employ so-called field sobriety tests to determine if a person suspected of impaired driving is intoxicated with alcohol.

The gait sobriety test has now been integrated into a smartphone, whose accelerometer can determine if a person is walking ‘funny’.

For their study, the researchers recruited 17 volunteers (12 male and 5 female) and served them vodka cocktails (for science!). After an hour of drinking their first serving, the participants had to complete a walking trial consisting of 10 steps forward and 10 steps backward every hour for seven hours. During this entire time, their smartphones were strapped to their lower backs, which is where the accelerometer can most accurately determine a person’s gait.

Their height and weight were also measured in order to determine how much alcohol would be required to intoxicate them — this is equivalent to a breath alcohol concentration (BrAC) of 0.08. Speaking to Inverse, lead study author Brian Suffoleto says that one shot of vodka raises the blood alcohol concentration (BAC) by 0.02 for men and by 0.03 for women.

The smartphone accelerometer recorded lateral movement corresponding to a back-and-forth swaying motion, which is a key sign of intoxication. Based on this recorded motion, the researchers could determine if a person’s BrAC was above 0.08 with 92% accuracy.

As an important caveat, these results are valid in a highly controlled research environment. In the real world, people’s gaits will naturally vary much more as they move around obstacles or in a crowded environment like a bar. Also, people don’t wear their smartphones on their backs, although Suffoleto says that they can adapt their analysis algorithms to data recorded from the trouser’s pocket.

The biggest challenge, according to Suffoleto, is designing a communication strategy that might convince a person impaired with alcohol to respond positively to supportive messaging.

In order to reduce alcohol-related traffic accidents and deaths, some have previously proposed embedding breath analyzers inside vehicles. If the exhaled breath contains alcohol levels past a legal threshold, the car won’t start. However, this is unrealistic, says Suffoleto — at least in the U.S. where consumers would not purchase a vehicle that would lock them out of their own property.

But that doesn’t mean there aren’t more persuasive methods. Suffoleto envisions a system where people can pay significantly less for their car insurance as long as they agree to this sort of monitoring.

The findings appeared in the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs.

share Share

DNA From 7,000-Year-Old Mummies Reveals Lost Civilization From Sahara

Two ancient mummies reveal a mysterious, isolated lineage in North Africa.

This Warrior Was Buried in Ice Under a Bone Shield for 4,000 Years and His Face Was Just Reconstructed

A neolithic warrior gets a face thanks to modern tech.

Why taking a bath in wine is idiotic and wasteful

Of course a wine bath isn't good for you. What are you thinking?

These Robot Dogs Kept Going Viral on Social Media — Turns Out, They Have a Spying Backdoor

It looks like a futuristic pet, but the Unitree Go1 robot dog came with a silent stowaway.

Kawasaki Unveils a Rideable Robot Horse That Runs on Hydrogen and Moves Like an Animal

Four-legged robot rides into the hydrogen-powered future, one gallop at a time.

New Mushroom Tile Mimics Elephant Skin to Cool Buildings Without Any Electricity

Bio-inspired tiles made from fungi could cool buildings without using energy

Rome’s Inequality Was Bad. But China's Han Dynasty Was Even Worse

The richest one percenters dominated ancient Rome and Han China. Today's not very far off.

This Common Vaccine Seems To Reduce Dementia Risk by 20%

What if one of the most effective tools we have against dementia has been sitting quietly in our medical arsenal all along?

Astronauts made miso in space and it's a bit different than the one from Earth

Are we starting to have a “space terroir” for foods?

A Romanian grandma used a strange rock as a doorstop for decades. It turned out to be a million-dollar relic from the age of dinosaurs

An elderly woman unknowingly held a prehistoric gem worth over $1 million in her home