9 comments

  • dr_dshiv 2 hours ago

    I have a PhD student working on EEG audio decoding. We are presently focused on a simpler subtopic: the detection of consonance and dissonance in the brain as it listens to music.

  • vlovich123 2 hours ago

    Prediction: even if this requires surgery, unlocking inner thought will be used in criminal proceedings to establish guilt or attempt to be used to prove innocence. It will definitely be used unethically in military/intelligence interrogations until the law catches up.

    • ksaj an hour ago

      I'm not sure if this would be able to detect the difference between truthful thoughts about actual memories, and intrusive thoughts that could give the entirely wrong impression.

      Yet, they still do use lie detectors, even though the things they detect can be faked, or triggered out of personal alarm or offense. So it is entirely possible, regardless.

    • red75prime 2 hours ago

      "Hit him with this $5 wrench until he tells us the password" XKCD 538

      • devmor 2 hours ago

        We normally do not accept people being hit with wrenches (or a contextual contemporary) in criminal justice trials.

        • red75prime an hour ago

          I don't think that the brain surgery is accepted as well.

    • pmontra 39 minutes ago

      My first dystopic thought was immigration counters at airports /s

  • ksaj an hour ago

    They don't seem to mention if it is elective. An all or nothing mechanism might spell out words that the patient really didn't intend on others seeing (like "Ugh, that guy again! I can't stand the way he...")

    It is pretty difficult to control your inner dialog against spontaneous and triggered thoughts.