Brain Scanner Can Tell What You're Looking At 158
palegray.net writes "Wired News brings us an article about brain scanning systems that can accurately tell what you're looking at by analyzing your brain's electrical activity. Using a database constructed of readings taken on test subjects who were shown thousands of photographs, the system works in real time to decipher what you're seeing. Naturally, there are some ethical concerns over some potential applications for this technology. Definitely a new twist on "input devices.""
urgh (Score:5, Funny)
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Ok brain scanner (Score:5, Funny)
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You're sick. That's clearly goatse you're ogling.
I've found a demonstration site (Score:2)
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Re:Ok brain scanner (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Ok brain scanner (Score:5, Funny)
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It's alright, you'll loop back around to being turned on by chicks in bikinis soon enough, then the treadmill begins again.
Brain Scanning and Lie Detection (Score:2)
*sigh* No more private thoughts, then.
more than ever - Thought Privacy laws (Score:3, Insightful)
With such powerful technologies, and with such rapid development there's going to be an everpressing need for privacy laws that protect our thoughts, literally.
Re:more than ever - Thought Privacy laws (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:more than ever - Thought Privacy laws (Score:5, Interesting)
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Legislation, I hope.
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Yeah, because workers usually have more clout than businesses when it comes to shaping legislation.
Call me a cynic.. (Score:2)
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"legislation" never solves any social problem -- except problems government created in the first place (cases in point: segregation, slavery)
The proper solution -- and the only one that actually works in the long run without perverse, unintended consequences [isil.org] -- is for employees to refuse to work under such conditions.
Same reason I won't work for any employer that mandates a drug test. Period.
It isn't time for fear mongering yet (Score:4, Informative)
Excuse me while I ignore the content of your post (Score:4, Funny)
I don't know about you, but I would never fit in a viola.
Re:Excuse me while I ignore the content of your po (Score:2)
OK, so I read it now, and... (Score:2)
How much would it suck to have a lawyer tell the jury that you saw yourself kill someone? How stupid are people? (Allow me to enter into evidence: Internet Explorer, truck balls, aspartame, Enzyte)
Re:more than ever - Thought Privacy laws (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually I'm hoping that this technology gets developped even more and is proven to be infallible.
Can you imagine the stinkin' lawyers we'd get rid of? Stick the guy in the brain scanner and ask 'did you rob the store and murder the clerk - yes or no?'. Done. No more blowing a quarter million dollars of my tax money on some trial for a lowlife criminal (or wrongly convicting the innocent).
uh (Score:2, Insightful)
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yah sounds awesome.
Stick a guy in the scanner and ask "do you agree with the government?" Yes or no, done.
I think at some point our never ending quest for understanding of the way the world works will end up trapping us into a life of never ending servitude from birth, i don't want to be a part of that world.
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Yes, that's right. Slippery slope and all that. And gun registry is just one step to finding all the guns and taking them away. They started with cars you know. It's now illegal to own or drive a car without registration. They're going to take the cars away first and then the guns. Get your tinfoil hats to protect against government eavesdropping too.
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Please do not lump me in with your paranoia. And go get some prescription anti-psychotics. Strong ones. Seriously.
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So if the accused can be placed on the stand he can be stuck in the scanner. If he can't go on the stand he can't go in the scanner. It's not really complicated. This just prevents someone from lying on the stand.
I'm more worried about airports. (Score:2)
I love it (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:I love it (Score:5, Funny)
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brains (Score:2, Insightful)
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Dreams are generally a kind of "mix-tape" of various memories -- they're constructed from memories.
Is this your personal theory or did you read this somewhere? AFAIK, there is no generally accepted theory as to what dreams are, how they are generated, etc. In fact, I think the only objective measurement of 'dreaming' is rapid eye movement during sleep. And even that doesn't necessarily indicate 'dreaming' -- we only know that because when we wake people who are showing REM say that they were dreaming when you woke them.
There was a professor of Religious Studies, Jonathan Smith, who claimed that that d
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It's nothing more or less. That's just what dreams are, your brain imagining things because it's bored. I don't know why people try to turn it into something else (eg. something magical).
This isn't to say dreams mean nothing. Imagination is a huge part of how we get about in th
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http://www.pbfcomics.com/?cid=PBF160-The_Dreamcatcher3000.gif [pbfcomics.com]
My girlfriend can do the same thing... (Score:5, Funny)
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Patient: What am I looking at now? (Score:5, Funny)
NEXT!
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Infinite recursion, surely?
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Sex
Sex
Sex
Got an itch
Sex
Nurse's cleavage
Sex
What do I want for lunch?
Sex...
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the goatse art of self defense (Score:5, Funny)
-Aaaaaaaaaaaaagh!
I wonder... (Score:2)
My guess would be the Starship Enterprise flying by, followed by a bunch of sharks with lazers?
Just don't get two brain scanners together (Score:2)
ethical issues? c'mon ... (Score:5, Interesting)
From the article Those technologies remain decades away, but researchers say it's not too soon to think about them, especially if research progresses at the pace set by this study.
Well, I beg to differ. By the time the "decades" have passed, we'll actually have some information to consider, not just a load of pie-in-the-sky whimsy from people who have no facts to base it on.
Let's worry about today's ethical issues and leave things like this for when they look like becoming a practical reality.
Re:ethical issues? c'mon ... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Stargate Atlantis's Puddle jumper neural interface just might become reality, well with a helmet. Focus your thoughts and the aircraft follows.
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Closer to the Real Thing Than you think (Score:5, Interesting)
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I'm guessing it doesn't*, so it would be pretty impressive (to me) if it could.
*based on my absolutely uneducated belief that a picture of a dog will activate neuron connections based on my
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2. The method is only observing the neuronal activity in your (first) visual processing areas (V1, V2 and V3 to be precise), so any association with a dog that bit you is not seen.
3. The activity in V1 is supposed to be a decent copy of the image projected onto the retina, although it is split up in different components. So retrieving the image from V1 is possibl
ethical concerns (Score:3, Insightful)
Whose code of ethics are they following here? The legal profession's? The medical profession's? The psychiatric profession's? The military's? All these organizations have different codes of ethics. Who's concerned that this may be against their code of ethics?
There are certainly moral concerns.
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And mine. Pat Robertson has converted more Christians to athiesm than all the athiests on slashdot combined.
Games, etc. (Score:3, Interesting)
Now what would be terribly interesting is coupling this sort of thing with a car and a transparent LCD windshield. It would be able to enhance various aspects of your car's display and perhaps make some things more apparent from your peripheral vision.
Or for combat pilots, using this sort of technology to target a craft based on where your eyes are focused.
I could think about this all day...
Slashdotter subject #4035 brainscan results (Score:2, Funny)
Slashdotter subject #4036 brainscan results (Score:2)
Grokster. (Score:2, Funny)
Dystopia (Score:3, Insightful)
So it's not out of luddism that I hope they belay this advance; rather, I want to wait until we've rebalanced our government and society to ensure our freedom and rights will not be abused.
In the meantime, why not cure cancer? That's an unambiguous good. Go work on that!
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They are currently "rebalancing" our government. Only not in the direction you hoped.
Am I the only one who is thinking 1984 (Score:4, Interesting)
How far is it from detecting what you are looking at to detecting general ideas like "Violent Thoughts", "Adult thoughts", "Rebelious Thoughts" - if they use different parts of the brain....
Seriously. If I got a $50 fine every time I thought about killing someone, It'd get damn'd expensive.
It could get recursive, what if I wanted to kill the guy for fining me $50.....
Let's not ever consider being fined for "Adult thoughts"
Mind-reading Devices in Courtrooms (Score:2, Interesting)
Would that prevent their use in courtrooms? I don't think so.
I know of someone who was charged with a child pornography offence, who was targeted for being prominent in the paedophile activist community.
I strongly suspect that he was set up, however this will be irrelevant in the courtroom, as people know that he's attracted to children. In other words, he "must be guilty", simply because of what he is known to think.
Thi
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If, with technology like that, we could ask "Did you download and possess child pornography" and know we were getting a truthful answer, wouldn't that help innocent people more than the current reliance on character testimony does?
Good research, but not mind reading... (Score:4, Informative)
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My question is, can we take this beyond the visual cortex? Why not try the same experiment but have the subjects simply think about different objects. Or alternativly, send in a whiff of apple pie sent and see if the signals for apple pie light up.
BSoD (Score:2)
Crotch-staring guys, eye-gazing ladies (Score:3, Interesting)
A study was done recently that was using eye position recognition, and participants were shown photos of all kinds of people. The computer was able to note where (on the image) the person's eyes were fixed, and for how long.
They found (among other things) that women tend to fix upon the face and eyes of the person in the image. And they found that guys frequently stared at the crotch area, such as that of a baseball player (hey, dudes, it's a CUP, don't get so insecure). There were other findings, but these are the more memorable ones.
Article here [ojr.org].When will this include sounds you're imagining? (Score:2, Interesting)
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The device just won't be able to tell what song they were trying to sing that has only one three notes, all of them sung in the key of "off"
If only it would go the other way... (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course, technology like that opens up the way for abuse -- if the subject is induced to see a face or talking head which they believe is their deity, while being simultaneously subjected to sound-inducing microwaves [wikipedia.org] (or this ootoob video [youtube.com]), that person thinks they see and hear God, as it were. And the voice says "I want you to build me, an ark" or "I want you to kill so-and-so" or "Your boyfriend needs a lot more sex"....
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Berzerkely? (Score:2)
And yet.... (Score:2, Interesting)
"However the team have warned about potential privacy issues in the future when scanning techniques improve. 'It is possible that decoding brain activity could have serious ethical and privacy implications downstream in, say, the 30 to 50-year time frame,' said Prof Gallant. '[We] believe strongly that no one should be subjected to any form of brain-reading process involuntarily, covertly, or without complete informed consent.'"
And yet they invented it anyway. I guess you could use it to study how the brai
Re:And yet.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Uh, how about research into artificial sight for the blind, or restoring visual comprehension to persons with brain damage? A tool is a tool, an object that is neither good or evil. It's how people use it that's the problem.
David Brain (Score:2)
Female androids (Score:2)
This isn't new (Score:4, Interesting)
As for the "ethical concerns", give me a break. The only thing this technology can do is tell what you're looking at in realtime. Your employers and the government can do this a lot more easily by simply looking at your face and figuring out where your eyes are pointing. They can't use this technology to tell what you've looked at in the past, it probably can't even tell them what elements of your visual field you're actually paying attention to, and they certainly can't use it to read your memory or current thoughts. It's not technology that's ever likely to be at all useful outside a lab, it's simply being used to help us better understand how the brain works. Maybe one day there'll be a machine that can pull private information out of your brain, but this isn't it. Put the tinfoil hats away, people.
Do . not . tell . the . US . or . UK . government (Score:2)
Umm.. (Score:2)
Get back to me when it can tell what you are thinking about!
Other cultures/languages (Score:2)
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Excellent question! It would be interesting if looking at the same picture created the same brainwave pattern in everyone or even in most people. Comparing the patterns the same picture creates in different brains might lead to all kinds of discoveries about how the brain works.
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