British Scientists Work on Mind Reading

British Scientists Work on Mind Reading
http://www.sci-tech-today.com/story.xhtml?story_id=102005RLJ2FO&page=1
By Steve Connor
March 16, 2009 7:12AM

It's at least 10 years, probably more, from getting anywhere near 
that kind of technology, where you could literally read someone's 
thoughts in a single short session when they don't want you to. We 
might be about 10 years away from doing that, so it might be useful 
to start having those ethical discussions in the near future.

[]
  Having the ability to read someone's mind with a thought machine 
has come a step closer after scientists showed that they could guess 
a person's memory simply by looking at the electrical activity of their brain.

Scientists have found that spatial memories can be read by a brain 
scanner so that it is possible to predict automatically where someone 
imagines themselves to be (the exact location in a maze, for 
instance) without actually asking them.

It's also a small step toward the idea of mind reading, because just 
by looking at neural activity, we are able to say what someone is 
thinking, said Demis Hassabis of University College London.

It may one day be possible to do the same with other types of 
memories and thoughts, although the possibility of using a 
mind-reading machine to solve crimes or to fight terrorism is still a 
distant prospect, Dr. Hassabis said.

It's at least 10 years, probably more, from getting anywhere near 
that kind of technology, where you could literally read someone's 
thoughts in a single short session when they don't want you to, he 
said. We might be about 10 years away from doing that, so it might be 
useful to start having those ethical discussions in the near future 
in preparation for that but were still a long way from doing anything 
practical, Dr Hassabis said.

The study was led by UCL's Professor Eleanor Maguire who had already 
shown that a small area of the brain behind a region called the 
hippocampus is enlarged in male taxi drivers who had done The 
Knowledge memorizing the maze of London streets. Professor Maguire 
trained a different set of male volunteers to navigate themselves 
through a virtual maze on a computer while their brains were being 
scanned by a functional MRI machine. We know that the hippocampus 
underpins our ability to navigate, to form and recollect memories and 
how to imagine the future. But how the activity across millions of 
hippocampal neurons supports the functions is a fundamental question 
in neuroscience, Professor Maguire said.

The scientists found that certain nerve cells in the brains 
hippocampus, called place cells, became stimulated in definite 
patterns of activity that the researchers could analyze to guess 
where in the maze each man imagined himself to be.

Remarkably, using this technique we found that we could accurately 
predict the position of an individual within this virtual environment 
solely from the pattern of activity within their hippocampus, she said.

In contrast, previous research on animals suggested that there were 
no particular patterns of activity within the nerve cells of the 
hippocampus that could be used to predict spatial memory. Our 
technique, which looks at the picture over many thousands of neurons, 
shows this cannot be the whole story, Professor Maguire said. If were 
able to predict spatial memories from brain activity, this means 
there must be a structure to how it is coded in the neurons.

The study, published in the journal Current Biology and funded by the 
Wellcome Trust, the world's biggest medical research charity, could 
help scientists to understand the fundamental memory problems behind 
some neurological diseases. Understanding how we as humans record our 
memories is critical to helping us learn how information is processed 
in the hippocampus and how our memories are eroded by diseases such 
as Alzheimer's, Dr. Hassabis said.

The Future

Ethical questions

* Being able to read someone's mind has been the stuff of science 
fiction, but how far are we away from the reality of visualizing the 
secret thoughts of people without them knowing?

The latest research is strictly limited to a certain set of nerve 
cells in the brain specifically the hippocampus region that are known 
to be involved in memorizing spatial awareness and navigation.

Professor Eleanor Maguire of University College London, who led the 
study, said that the finding opens up the possibility of 
understanding how other kinds of memories are encoded in the brain, 
although we are still a long way from seeing inside someone's head. 
We can rest easy in terms of mind-reading. While technically in this 
study we were able to predict someone's spatial memory from their 
brain activity, there was nothing intrusive about what we did, 
Professor Maguire said.

It's not that we can put somebody in a brain scanner and suddenly 
read their thoughts. It's quite an involved process that's at a very 
early stage.

But in science you can never say never, and the technique could be 
adapted for other kinds of memory infiltration. It's probably quite 
far away from having social, ethical and probably forensic 
implications, Professor Maguire said.

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