What is Gaslighting Check?
Gaslighting Check is a purpose-built AI tool engineered to uncover emotional manipulation—especially gaslighting—in everyday digital and spoken interactions. Unlike generic sentiment analyzers, it's trained on clinical psychology frameworks, linguistic red-flag patterns, and real-world coercive communication data to recognize the insidious hallmarks of psychological control: denial of reality, chronic contradiction, minimization of feelings, and strategic confusion. Whether you're reviewing a tense email thread, transcribing a difficult family call, or reflecting on recurring workplace feedback, Gaslighting Check delivers objective, evidence-based insight—not interpretation. Built with trauma-informed design principles, the platform treats every analysis as both a diagnostic moment and a validation step, helping users move from doubt to discernment with confidence.
How to Use Gaslighting Check
Using Gaslighting Check requires no technical expertise—just honesty and intention. Begin by securely uploading a text transcript (SMS, Slack, email) or an audio file (MP3, WAV, M4A); our AI automatically transcribes speech when needed. Within seconds, the system evaluates linguistic markers, tone shifts, power imbalances, and narrative inconsistencies—and surfaces them in plain language. Your personalized report breaks down each manipulation signal: what was said, why it qualifies as gaslighting or emotional coercion, how frequently it occurred, and its likely impact on relational trust. Then, engage with the AI Coach—a guided conversational interface that helps you reflect, contextualize findings, and explore grounded next steps—from boundary-setting scripts to documentation templates for therapy or HR use.
For deeper insight, premium users unlock longitudinal tracking: compare analyses over time to spot escalation or repetition, generate exportable PDF reports with timestamped annotations, and access expert-reviewed response strategies tailored to your role (e.g., “as a manager,” “as a caregiver,” “in a romantic partnership”). Every interaction is designed to restore agency—not assign blame.