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Science & Technology
Brain scans reveal intentions of calculating minds
2007-02-10
Brain scans that can read a personÂ’s secret intentions even before they act have been demonstrated by researchers. In a recent study, the technology was 70% accurate at predicting whether participants planned to add or subtract a pair of numbers. Paralysed people may one day be able to use devices based on the technique to carry out complex actions, the researchers say. However, ethical concerns have been raised about its possible use in interrogation.

John-Dylan Haynes at the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences in Leipzig, Germany, and colleagues recruited eight people for their trial and placed each of them in a brain scanning machine that produced computed tomography (CT) images. While participants had their brains scanned, they were asked to secretly decide whether they would add or subtract two numbers due to appear on a screen in front of them. After a pause of a few seconds, they then viewed the two numbers and gave their answer.

Once the computer program designed to interpret the brain scans had been “trained” on 40-minutes-worth of calculations by a participant, it could predict their calculating intention with 70% accuracy. Haynes explains that the computer program could do this by focusing on the pattern of activity in a brain region known as the medial prefrontal cortex. “It’s important to see if we can further increase the accuracy” of the brain scan tests, he says, adding that it might be achieved by training the computer for a longer period of time.

According to Haynes, devices that pick up on brain activity in this region could one day help people with paralysis more easily perform complex actions – such as composing sentences on a computer – with thought alone. Previous technology has relied on signals from the brain’s motor region to enable paralysed patients to write sentences this way. But this involves the tedious task of moving a cursor across the computer screen to select from the alphabet. Haynes says using signals from the medial prefrontal cortex might enable people to simply think of the letter.

Neuroscientist Read Montague of the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas, US, says the findings add to a growing body of evidence that decisions can be predicted by observing the medial prefrontal cortex. “There are findings now that show that [activity in this brain region] can predict decisions to purchase an item for money or to choose a specific numerical ‘liking’ level for art,” he says.

Brain-scanning "mind reading" techniques raise ethical issues, however, and using such a tool to predict whether or not a person intends to commit a crime, for example, is contentious and should be debated by society now, Haynes believes.
Posted by:ryuge

#3  Â“ItÂ’s important to see if we can further increase the accuracy” of the brain scan tests," he says

Good. He noticed. Deciding whether to add or subtract two numbers is not the same as deciding to blow up the infidel vs. going home and settling down, then maybe or maybe not leaving one's wife and kidlings to blow up the infidel later.
Posted by: trailing wife   2007-02-10 08:34  

#2  Calculating minds...

A 3-year-old boy examined his testicles while taking a bath. "Mom?" he asked, "Are these my brains?" "Not yet," she replied.
Posted by: Besoeker   2007-02-10 07:25  

#1  How about running the boys at Gitmo through the scanner before the tag and release program is executed. Then they can verify the test with DNA parts gathered later.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2007-02-10 06:42  

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