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    Scientists use brain scans to read minds

Research from the University of California has shown neuroscientists can read a person’s mind from a brain scan image shown on a computer screen.

By Jennifer Scott, 2 Nov 2009 at 11:03

Brain scan

A futuristic technology enabling scientists to read a person’s mind has come to light this week.

Developed by neuroscientists at the University of California, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) offers scans which can be used to identify what a person is thinking.

The research was conducted earlier this year with 130 people participating.

They were asked to perform one of eight mental tasks – including reading aloud, doing simple monetary tasks and counting the number of tones they heard while having a brain scan.

The neuroscientists could then identify which tasks they were performing and, in turn, predict what they would do next purely from the images.

In the future, this could be used to determine what criminals are thinking or even establish what people are dreaming about, the researchers said.

Russell Poldrack, a professor of psychology at UCLA, said in a statement: "It turns out that we can predict quite well which of these eight tasks they are doing."

"If we were just guessing, we would get it right about 13 per cent of the time. We get it right about 80 per cent of the time with our statistical tool. It's not perfect, but it is quite good – but not nearly good enough to be admissible in court, for example.”

Comparisons are being drawn between this research and the technology used in the film Minority Report, where criminals are identified before committing a crime.

However, Poldrack urges caution with such suggestions. "Our study suggests that the kinds of things that some people have talked about in terms of mind reading are probably still pretty far off," he said.

"If we are only 80 per cent accurate with eight very different thoughts and we want to figure out what you're thinking out of millions of possible thoughts, we're still very far away from achieving that."

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3 comments

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Not so worried about Minority Report...

...more worried about The Matrix, 13th Floor, Vanilla Sky, etc. (and Dark City, Truman Show for motivation).

By Markius_Lanzius on Monday Nov 2

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The End Of Freedom

Make no mistake, if a concept this powerful, even at this stage, shows this much promise, it will be abused. At the point where this technology becomes practical, it signals no less than the end of mankind, as we know ourselves today. Concepts such as freedom and liberty and 'freedom of thought' will cease to exist - they could not be protected. Those in control will enslave those subjected to this technology. Hitler probably had wet dreams about this kind of stuff and there is no reason to suggest that there aren't just as many people just like him waiting for a chance like this to come along. It is out of the bottle now, so just a matter of time.

By Auracious on Tuesday Nov 3

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Freedom of speech is all but a fantasy

looks like freedom of thought could be next... At one time, I would have disagreed, but now I find myself agreeing with Auracious. Humankind has a history of abusing technologies and unfortunately, I doubt this will be any different.

By dogsoldier on Tuesday Nov 3

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