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Scientists create machine that knows what you are thinking   Message List  
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Scientists create machine that knows what you are thinking
By FIONA MACRAE

Last updated at 14:52pm on 3rd January 2008

Scientists have developed a machine which is capable of reading our
mind and revealing our most private thoughts.

American researchers from Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh,
found that, with the aid of a sophisticated scanner and computer
programme, they were able to determine how the brain lights up when
thinking about different subjects.

Using an advanced form of MRI scanner, they analysed how the brain
reacted to ten drawings of tools and buildings.

They then used a computer programme to work out whether a person was
thinking about a tool or a building.

The researchers' analysis was found to be 97 per cent accurate but
they went on to show that they could distinguish between two similar
objects, such as two different tools, almost as successfully.

This is the first time the technique has been finetuned to
distinguish between similar objects.

The brain scans also showed many different brain regions are involved
in processing information even in the case of something as simple as
a line drawing of a hammer.

Thinking about how a hammer is used activated the areas involved in
movement, while thinking about the shape of a hammer and what it is
used for lit up other regions.

Despite being limited to picking up the thoughts behind just ten
pictures, the researchers are confident that they will soon be able
to identify entire sentences.

One of the team, Dr Svetlana Shinkareva, said: "We hope to progress
to identifying the thoughts associated not just with pictures but
also with words and eventually sentences."

The technique could also have medical applications by, for example,
providing valuable insights into conditions such as autism.

Study leader Professor Marcel Just said: "People with autism perceive
others in a distinctive way that has been difficult to characterise.

"This approach offers a way to discover that characterisation."

The study, published in the journal PLoS ONE, also showed that
different people think about the same thing in the same way.

"This part of the study establishes, as never before, that there is a
commonality in how different people's brains represent the same
subject," the study said.

"There has always been a philosophical conundrum as to whether one
person's perception of the colour blue is the same as another
person's.

"Now we see that there is a great deal of commonality across
different people's brain activity corresponding to familiar tools and
dwellings."

The device's possibilities can, however, be extended and the team
envisage a time when it will be used to conduct infallible lie
detector tests, while the accurate interpretation of a person's
intentions could allow police to arrest criminals before they break
the law, as seen in the film Minority Report.

<http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/technology/technology.
html?in_article_id=505756&in_page_id=1965>




Fri Jan 4, 2008 4:06 pm

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Scientists create machine that knows what you are thinking By FIONA MACRAE Last updated at 14:52pm on 3rd January 2008 Scientists have developed a machine...
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