could "pre-crime" from minority report be just around the corner?

Recent studies from UCLA and Rutgers University neuroscientists provides evidence that a new brain scanning technique known as functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) can be used in certain circumstances to determine what a person is thinking. At the same time, the researchers reveal that highly accurate "mind reading" using fMRI is still far from reality - so all you "big brother" conspiracists can rest easy for little while longer!

The research is scheduled to be published in the October 2009 issue of the journal Psychological Science.

In the study, participants had their brains scanned in an MRI scanner at UCLA's Ahmanson–Lovelace Brain Mapping Center while they performed one of eight mental tasks. The tasks included pressing buttons at certain cues, reading words aloud, saying whether pairs of words rhyme, counting the number of tones they heard and making monetary decisions. The scientists calculated how accurately they could tell from the fMRI brain scans which mental task each participant was engaged in.

"We take 129 of the subjects and apply a statistical tool to learn the differences among people doing these eight tasks, then we take the 130th person and try to tell which of the tasks this person was doing; we do that for every person," said lead study author Russell Poldrack, a professor of psychology who holds UCLA's Wendell Jeffrey and Bernice Wenzel Term Chair in Behavioral Neuroscience.

"It turns out that we can predict quite well which of these eight tasks they are doing," he said. "If we were just guessing, we would get it right about 13 percent of the time. We get it right about 80 percent 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.

"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," Poldrack said. "If we are only 80 percent 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."

Poldrack's study is one of the first to show that neuroscientists can make these kinds of predictions on new people, whose brain patterns the researchers have never seen before. In most previous studies, researchers made predictions about a person's mental state after having already studied that person's brain to understand its particular patterns.

"Our study indicates that different people's brains work very similarly," Poldrack said. "We often tend to focus on how different each person's brain is, but our study suggests that most healthy people's brains work in very similar ways; otherwise, this approach wouldn't work.

"We can tell a lot about what you're thinking using functional MRI, even though we have never seen your brain before," he said. "However, it is limited in that there are only eight things that we are letting you think about in this study."

The tools used in this research come from a scientific field known as machine learning, which is related to statistics and computer science, said Poldrack, who noted that this technology is heavily employed by companies like Amazon to predict what people will buy based on their previous purchases.

Nearly 10 years ago, neuroscientists showed that if they take brain images with fMRI while people look at different objects, such as faces, houses and chairs, they can use the tools of machine learning to predict with high accuracy what object the subjects are looking at — if the scientists first know from studying brain activity how each subject's brain responds to those objects.

Source: http://www.newsroom.ucla.edu/portal/ucla/can-brain-imaging-read-minds-96...

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It's amazing how much research

It's amazing how much research we do into how our brain functions and yet we've barely scratched the surface. I've seen a lot of research being done into this particular area. It will be interesting to see how this is applied to helping people who cannot speak or communicate through normal methods, such as stroke victims.

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