Scientists Predicting Intentions 105
An anonymous reader writes to tell us German scientists claim to have the means of predicting decisions of high level mental activity. "In the past, experts had been able to detect decisions about making physical movements in advance. But researchers at Berlin's Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience claim they have now, for the first time, identified people's decisions about how they would later do a high-level mental activity _ in this case, adding versus subtracting."
Suspicion (Score:5, Insightful)
My more immediate concern is of the claims that are being made. The fundamental problem of course is developing a global signature for mind reading that is clean enough to derive robust statistics, keeping in mind that individuals brains are far from uniform in their anatomy, physiology or wiring. Work I performed more than a decade ago revealed similar cortical mapping patterns on subjects who performed tasks and then imagined performing those tasks. Certainly it is possible to determine volitional movements based upon our knowledge of neuroanatomy and statistical averages of wiring, but predicting "intentions" is a whole other ball game. The article is light on details and I've tried a search on more in-depth content, but if they are labeling "intentions" as complex behaviors, my eyebrows will be raised. For instance, determining which of two buttons to press invokes a whole series of kinesthetic volitional programming that should be able to be determined by mapping pre-motor cortex. However, if "intentions" are whether or not to engage in complex behaviors are what they are talking about, there is much more complex circuitry to consider including the possibility of imagery or imagining an action versus actually volitionally engaging in that activity.
Re:Suspicion (Score:5, Funny)
As I knew it would be!
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Not really intentions, but predictions. Apparently, from the binary decision test of adding or subtracting, they could predict within 70% certainty which path they would take. However, the article mentioned far reaching Orwellian type implications of this technology - like lie detection systems, which are about 70% reliable currently, so I see no improvement on that end. Of course, there's still much research and applicati
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Intention is precisely the right word that describes what they are trying to do as they are claiming to be able to *predict* an individuals course of action *before* it happens.
The brain controls everything you do, from breathing to posting on slashdot.
Really? Do tell...
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Perhaps "intention" isn't the right word to be using here.
Intention is precisely the right word that describes what they are trying to do as they are claiming to be able to *predict* an individuals course of action *before* it happens.
I'd rather see it as they're reading a *decision* that is made in the brain. That decision could of course be changed; who knows what the device would read if someone decided in advance to change their decision when the actual numbers appeared?
Re:Suspicion (Score:5, Interesting)
Here's how this stuff works. Step 1, scientist do incremental, meaningful, but boring (to those outside their specialty) work. Step 2, media picks up on story and puts overreaching spin on story. (Alternatively, the scientists, the journal, or the university's PR office puts out a press release supplying overreaching spin to credulous journalists.) Step 3, everybody sits back in wonderment at a finding that essentially establishes what we already knew: that mental processes take place in the physical brain.
Parent poster is right about the special demands of individual prediction. The basic science might be incrementally useful - trying to ultimately understand how future planning/intentions take place in the brain. (And given the breadth of mental operations that could be considered "intentions," there are probably hundreds of more studies that need to be done before that question can begin to be answered.) But going from a scientific explanatory mode, where you have potentially large samples and budgets and cooperative subjects, to prediction of individual behavior is a huge leap. Just look at a much older psychometric approach, the TAT, which is okay for research [psychologicalscience.org] but lousy for individual prediction [psychologicalscience.org]. Brain scanning may well turn out to be the next TAT, for precisely the same reasons.
Part of the problem is that a lot of this work is being done by medical researchers and neuroscientists who have no basic training in psychometrics. They're just reinventing old mistakes (but wasting a hell of a lot more money this time around).
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Well, sort of. My impression is that this has little to do with a lack of training in psychometrics, but a lot to do with the
Peer review & "the north Florida daily news" (Score:1)
I found no links or reference to this pseudo science.
This seems an "exciting" topic with little or no real substance, please provide the substantiation.
or has global warming brought warm temperatures & the August silly season early?
Re:Suspicion (Score:5, Informative)
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Mod parent up!
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I've only studied this at the undergrad level (then independently afterwards), but I also would regard this with extreme suspicion. Some people believe that
It will get much worse... (Score:1)
For now they only have the power to predict motions in the short-term. Soon they will be able to predict aggressive or anti-social behavior based on past behaviors. Then they'll be able to monitor a whole person's life and be able to tell with great accuracy what a decision will be based on the person's
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A bit ambiguous (Score:2)
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Sheesh, I can tell you that... they ain't gonna buy a PS3.
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devil's advocate (Score:4, Insightful)
A big portion of the work of prosecution in this country is spent proving intent. For example, the funny-looking guy that hangs out at the playground. Is he a creep, or is he just a birdwatcher? Obviously, a scanning device would figure that out pretty quick.
(... And I guarantee you that's the same kind of argument they'll make when pushing this thing, too. Because it's all about protecting the children. even at the expense of your fourth amendment rights.)
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To catch a predator... (Score:1)
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Not yet, anyway.
It seems that what is much more desperately needed than an intention-predictor, is an ironclad lie-detector. If we had a perfect truth serum, and (far more difficult to obtain) the political will to use it wholesale, the court system would be a very different place.
From what I've read so far, it seems that the hardest problem to solve on the way to a truth serum, i
I'm not a lawyer, but... (Score:2)
In a perfect world, sure. In the real world, intent is all you need. Ever heard of conspiracy? [wikipedia.org]. An overt "precursor" act (i.e. meeting with a hit-man, in the case of conspiracy to commit murder) is required to prove conspiracy, but that precursor act is basically just proof of intent, like this mind-reading device.
There is no crime of having intent to rob, but there is one of
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I'm not a lawyer either, but I think being convicted of conspiracy to commit a crime still requires some sort of action, especially one that is an obvious and immediate precursor to committing th
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Is that not what I wrote? In the example of the "conspiracy to commi
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And what's Jose Padilla in prison for, again?
Or Mike Hawash?
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Good point. I'm not particularly worried about the motivations or intentions of the folks working on this research. They sound like excited people doing cool work.
However, somewhere out there someone is thinking about the possibilities of, as User 956 notes, quantifying intent. Distilling it down to a number that statistically naive people can use to justify something.
For example, I see this at work in hiring practices where a weight is assigned to questions, and a list of preferred responses assigned th
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And I've always complained about it. People make a lot of noise about freedom of speech but we don't even have freedom of thought. If you unlawfully kill someone while intending to do it you get a longer sentence than if you didn't intend it. Punish someone for killing, but to punish them additionally because of what they were thinking at the time seems like the grossest kind of human rights abuse to me.
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We can consider your examples in this light. Whatever punishment you dangle in front of me, I'm not going to get better reflexes. So you don't punish the first person. But punishing people
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Who exactly told you this? I always thought it was to punish a given individual for a specific act.
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I smell a lot of victimization here.
Pre-Crime (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Pre-Crime (Score:4, Funny)
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I, for one,... (Score:5, Funny)
I randomize lots of things (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm now seeing that this was a very wise decision....
I do a lot of sub-optimal things, but at least I'm not predicatable
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Maybe.
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So this is how your average afternoon goes, right?...
Heads: don tin-foil hat and take a nap.
Tails: work on better randomizer.
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Gotta love the butterfly effect...
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If it were truly random, we couldn't predict it. But in actuality it's only psuedorandom...
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But it wouldn't take the genius of Hari Seldon or a bunch of German scientists to predict that somebody was going to make a dumb anti-Bush joke in this thread.
Whoa. (Score:5, Funny)
Be afraid. Be very afraid.
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out of curiosity...How can they tell the difference between adding a negative and subtracting a positive?
4 - 4 = 0 4 + -4 = 0....
Hrm.
TLF
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So it's not addition or subtraction that is high level. It's deciding which one to do...
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thoughtcrime (Score:1)
They could read your intention to post this (Score:2)
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Yes, but... (Score:4, Funny)
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This is BIG! (Score:1)
Thinking vs Doing (Score:1)
neat but... (Score:2, Insightful)
Then they studied which type of patterns were associated with different intentions.
"If you knew which thought signatures to look for, you could theoretically predict in more detail what people were going to do in the future," said Haynes.
Which isn't a million miles from... "we observed that just before our participant scratched their nose they raised thier hand". Using this observation we were able to predict when participants were about to scratch thier nose. And did so with an accuracy rate of 70%."
Don't get me wrong - I think this research is very interesting - but a little over egged at this moment in time.
Mindshades (Score:2)
Humans have inalienable privacy rights, which we create governments and tools to protect. We invented clothing, and then later the 4th Amendment. But back then our skulls could protect us. Now that such security through obscurity won't work
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Because if there's one thing governments are good at, it's slowing stuff down.
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catetory mistakes on parade (Score:1)
The CNS events in question may predict later behavior, or assist in doing so. What they will not do is deliver "intention" as the thing being measured. They are not that, and they are not even the same sort of thing as that.
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Since when? (Score:1)
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The Foolproof Lie Detector (Score:1)
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Actual research article (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.current-biology.com/content/article/ab
The full text requires a subscription, but I've pasted the abstract below:
Reading Hidden Intentions in the Human Brain
When humans are engaged in goal-related processing, activity in prefrontal cortex is increased [1, 2]. However, it has remained unclear whether this prefrontal activity encodes a subject's current intention [3]. Instead, increased levels of activity could reflect preparation of motor responses [4, 5], holding in mind a set of potential choices [6], tracking the memory of previous responses [7], or general processes related to establishing a new task set. Here we study subjects who freely decided which of two tasks to perform and covertly held onto an intention during a variable delay. Only after this delay did they perform the chosen task and indicate which task they had prepared. We demonstrate that during the delay, it is possible to decode from activity in medial and lateral regions of prefrontal cortex which of two tasks the subjects were covertly intending to perform. This suggests that covert goals can be represented by distributed patterns of activity in the prefrontal cortex, thereby providing a potential neural substrate for prospective memory [8, 9, 10]. During task execution, most information could be decoded from a more posterior region of prefrontal cortex, suggesting that different brain regions encode goals during task preparation and task execution. Decoding of intentions was most robust from the medial prefrontal cortex, which is consistent with a specific role of this region when subjects reflect on their own mental states.
Also, the final paragraph from the conclusion, which discusses where they'd like to go with this in the future:
Taken together, our results extend previous studies on the processing of goals in prefrontal cortex in several important ways. They reveal for the first time that spatial response patterns in medial and lateral prefrontal cortex encode a subject's covert intentions in a highly specific fashion. They also demonstrate a functional separation in medial prefrontal cortex, where more anterior regions encode the intention prior to its execution and more posterior regions encode the intention during task execution. These findings have important implications not only for the neural models of executive control, but also for technical and clinical applications, such as the further development of brain-computer interfaces, that might now be able to decode intentions that go beyond simple movements and extend to high-level cognitive processes.
Hahaha i just sent this to my prof... (Score:1)
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The Mike Resnick trilogy consisting of Soothsayer, Oracle and Prophet. (I forget the exact sequence in which those books are in the series, but you knew that, right?) Although in this case the mutant able to predict peoples actions does so by simply projecting an immense tangle of futures possible by her choosing her own actions, the treatement of all the ramificati
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Furthermore, nobody can deny that subconcious parts of our brain will have a bias to some choice before that choice has to be made. But that does not imply that we don't have a free will. All it says is that we identify our conciousness one-to-one with our mental processes instead of accepting th
Somebody! (Score:1)
Not true (Score:2)
Big deal (Score:2)
Does it work on lazy people? (Score:1)
Does that mean I'm really a threat to global stability?
Not unless I'm the first person to see the "Click HERE to Take Over The World!" ad. And even then... I never click on those ads, man.
Re:Cool I think (Score:4, Funny)