exercise that may last for hours or even days. [1,6,7] Much effort has been invested to increase adhesion by improving/optimizing the mechanical properties, thickness, and structural design of the device substrate. [8,9] However, just like many skin adhesives and transdermal patches, the strong adhesive design in many skin-mounted devices usually results in difficult detachment after their use, causing skin irritation, pain and even secondary damage to the wound when used, for example, as a wound healing dressing. [10] Strategies to design epidermal devices with strong adhesion and easy (preferably triggered, ondemand) detachment properties have yet to be developed. Moreover, technologies for safe disposal of epidermal electronics (most of which eventually end up in electronic wastes) have been rarely explored. Furthermore, harsh and fluctuating conditions during prolonged outdoor activities may affect the accuracy and reliability of those skin-mounted devices. [3,4] Most designs neglect these important aspects of epidermal devices, hindering them from real-world applications.Here we report a set of degradable epidermal electronics consisting of both physical and biochemical sensors that can monitor multidimensional physiological parameters such as electrocardiograms (ECG), electrooculography (EOG), and electromyography (EMG) as well as temperature, strain, humidity, and bacterial infection. Using an artificial neural network (ANN), important physiology signatures can be detected that are nearly unaffected by individual differences. Moreover, while Epidermal sensing devices offer great potential for real-time health and fitness monitoring via continuous characterization of the skin for vital morphological, physiological, and metabolic parameters. However, peeling them off can be difficult and sometimes painful especially when these skinmounted devices are applied on sensitive or wounded regions of skin due to their strong adhesion. A set of biocompatible and water-decomposable "skinfriendly" epidermal electronic devices fabricated on flexible, stretchable, and degradable protein-based substrates are reported. Strong adhesion and easy detachment are achieved concurrently through an environmentally benign, plasticized protein platform offering engineered mechanical properties and water-triggered, on-demand decomposition lifetime (transiency). Human experiments show that multidimensional physiological signals can be measured using these innovative epidermal devices consisting of electroand biochemical sensing modules and analyzed for important physiological signatures using an artificial neural network. The advances provide unique, versatile capabilities and broader applications for user-and environmentally friendly epidermal devices.Epidermal electronics, an emerging class of wearable electronic devices that are mounted on the human skin with conformal contact for direct skin-sensor interactions, are especially appealing for the "Internet of Things" and next-generation wearable medical applications. [1][2][3][4][5]...