Sent to you by Sean McBride via Google Reader: 'Pre-crime' detector
shows promise via Short Sharp Science by Tom Simonite on 9/23/08 Last
year, New Scientist revealed that the US Department of Homeland
Security is developing a system designed to detect "hostile thoughts"
in people walking through border posts, airports and public places like
sports stadia. Project Hostile Intent aimed to help security staff
choose who to pull over for a gently probing interview - or more.

Commentators slated the idea that sensors could spot people up to no
good from their pulse rate, breathing, skin temperature, or fleeting
facial expressions. One likened it to the "pre-crime" units that
predict criminal behaviour in the movie Minority Report.

However, last week, the DHS science unit gave an update on the project,
now dubbed the less-hostile-sounding Future Attribute Screening
Technologies (FAST) programme. And, if DHS claims are to be believed,
the research appears to be getting somewhere. At an equestrian centre
in Maryland, 140 paid volunteers walked through a pair of trailers
kitted out with a battery of FAST sensors, including cameras, infrared
heat sensors and an eyesafe laser radar, called a Bio-Lidar, that
measures pulse and breathing rate from a distance.

Some subjects were told to act shifty, be evasive, deceptive and
hostile. And many were detected. "We're still very early on in this
research, but it is looking very promising," says DHS science spokesman
John Verrico. "We are running at about 78% accuracy on mal-intent
detection, and 80% on deception."

That sounds incredibly high at such an early stage in the research -
but only tests on vast quantities of real people, rather than eager
volunteers, will present any real test.

Questions remain, however, as to how secure the system is. The machines
could reveal health conditions like heart murmurs and breathing
problems as well as stress levels - which would be an invasion of
privacy.

But Verrico says FAST has been through stringent privacy controls (pdf)
and that the data is never matched to a name. It is only used to make
decisions about whether to question someone, and then discarded.

The trial technology was installed in a trailer because it is planned
to be easily transportable, so that FAST trucks can appear at any
sports or music event as required. They look set to become as regular a
sight at such events as mobile toilets and catering trucks.

But is going to make a real difference? Or will bad guys learn to play
the system and render it another piece of what expert Bruce Schneier
dubs "security theatre".

Given that the FAST approach is not much different to the long
established - and long established as unreliable - polygraph, that
certainly seems plausible.

Paul Marks, technology correspondent
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