麻豆淫院

May 9, 2025

Your fingers wrinkle in the same pattern every time you're in the water for too long, study shows

New research from Binghamton University, State University of New York reveals that wrinkle patterns on skin actually stay the same over time. Credit: "Soaked hands" by Brenderous, CC BY 2.0
× close
New research from Binghamton University, State University of New York reveals that wrinkle patterns on skin actually stay the same over time. Credit: "Soaked hands" by Brenderous, CC BY 2.0

Do your wrinkles always form in the same pattern every time you're in the water for too long? According to new research from Binghamton University, State University of New York, the answer is yes.

A couple of years ago, Binghamton University Associate Professor Guy German published research about why human skin when you stay in the water too long. Received wisdom held that the water swelled your skin and made your fingers wrinkly, but little to no research had been done to prove that.

What German and his team at the Biological Soft Matter Mechanics Laboratory found is that beneath the skin actually contract after prolonged immersion, and that's where the wrinkles come from.

He wrote about the research for in 2023 as part of its Curious Kids feature. One of the follow-up questions stumped him, though.

"A student asked, 'Yeah, but do the wrinkles always form in the same way?' And I thought: I haven't the foggiest clue!" said German, a faculty member at the Thomas J. Watson College of Engineering and Applied Science's Department of Biomedical Engineering. "So it led to this research to find out."

Experimental procedure. (A) Control image of representative finger before water exposure. (B) Finger imaged after 30 min of water exposure on Day 0. (C) Finger imaged after 30 min of water exposure a minimum of 24 h later. Credit: Guy German
× close
Experimental procedure. (A) Control image of representative finger before water exposure. (B) Finger imaged after 30 min of water exposure on Day 0. (C) Finger imaged after 30 min of water exposure a minimum of 24 h later. Credit: Guy German

In a paper recently in the Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials, German and Rachel Laytin '23, MS '24, show that, yes, the topography patterns remain constant after multiple immersions.

Get free science updates with Science X Daily and Weekly Newsletters 鈥 to customize your preferences!

"Blood vessels don't change their position much鈥攖hey move around a bit, but in relation to other blood vessels, they're pretty static," German said. "That means the wrinkles should form in the same manner, and we proved that they do."

The research put subjects' fingers in water for 30 minutes, taking photos and then repeating the immersion under the same conditions at least 24 hours later. By comparing the images, German and Laytin found the same patterns of raised loops and ridges after both immersions.

They also made an interesting side discovery: "We've heard that wrinkles don't form in people who have median nerve damage in their fingers," German said. "One of my students told us, 'I've got median nerve damage in my fingers.' So we tested him鈥攏o wrinkles!"

Images of topographical skin wrinkles overlaid on each other from the two different time points 24 h apart, with opacity levels of (A) 0%, (B) 50%, (C) 100%. Credit: Guy German
× close
Images of topographical skin wrinkles overlaid on each other from the two different time points 24 h apart, with opacity levels of (A) 0%, (B) 50%, (C) 100%. Credit: Guy German
Representative wrinkle pairs established and numbered across (A) Day 0 and (B) 24+ hr later on a subject's ring finger. Black curves denote clearly paired wrinkle morphologies. Red curves denote inconsistent wrinkles between the two time points. (For interpretation of the references to colour in this figure legend, the reader is referred to the Web version of this article.). Credit: Guy German
× close
Representative wrinkle pairs established and numbered across (A) Day 0 and (B) 24+ hr later on a subject's ring finger. Black curves denote clearly paired wrinkle morphologies. Red curves denote inconsistent wrinkles between the two time points. (For interpretation of the references to colour in this figure legend, the reader is referred to the Web version of this article.). Credit: Guy German

As much fun as it was to figure out something a child asked, the research also could have real-world applications in forensics, such as fingerprinting at and identifying bodies found after prolonged water exposure. German's father, a retired U.K. police officer, faced some of these challenges during his law enforcement career.

"Biometrics and fingerprints are built into my brain," he said. "I always think about this sort of stuff, because it's fascinating."

German is eager to further explore questions about skin immersion with his students: "I feel like a kid in a candy store, because there's so much science here that I don't know. We thank the people at The Conversation and the wonderful question they asked us, because it does create cool new science."

More information: Rachel Laytin et al, On the repeatability of wrinkling topography patterns in the fingers of water immersed human skin, Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials (2025).

Provided by Binghamton University

Load comments (0)

This article has been reviewed according to Science X's and . have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility:

fact-checked
trusted source
proofread

Get Instant Summarized Text (GIST)

Finger wrinkles formed after prolonged water exposure consistently appear in the same pattern with each immersion. This pattern stability is attributed to the relatively fixed positions of blood vessels beneath the skin. The findings suggest potential forensic applications, such as identification after water exposure. Wrinkling does not occur in individuals with median nerve damage.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.