Computer program analyzes brain activity
Sunday, January 4th, 2009 |
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Posted by John under: Knowledge Increased
PITTSBURGH, Jan. 4 (UPI) — A computer program developed at a Pittsburgh university can offer limited insights into one’s thoughts by analyzing brain activation patterns, researchers say.
Could be a useful tool during interrogations of suspected resisters to the New World Order. ITD Editor
Knowledge Increased
“And the LORD said, Behold, the people is one, and they have all one language; and this they begin to do: and now nothing will be restrained from them, which they have imagined to do.â€
—Genesis 11:6
Carnegie Mellon University computer science Professor Tom Mitchell , who is working on the computer algorithm project, said by analyzing an individual’s brain activity, the program can make very accurate guesses at which word of a selected pair a person is thinking about, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported Sunday. It can hit correctly up to 90 percent of the time compared with a simple 50-50 guess, the newspaper said.
“Even though we’re obviously very different and have had different experiences, so that when you think of a Ford Edsel you probably think of something different than what I think of, ” the researcher said, “nevertheless, we’re similar enough that these (computer) programs can tell us quite a bit about what we’re thinking.”
Psychologist Marcel Just, who is also working on the project, told the newspaper the program’s use of magnetic resonance imaging to make educated guesses would likely lead to additional thought-recognition efforts in the future.
“Fifty years from now,” Just said, “I think it’ll be plausible that we’ll be able to identify people’s thoughts with less cumbersome equipment than an MRI scanner, just the way we identify a person’s speech today.”
Doug says Comment posted on January 05th, 2009
I am more and more convinced by articles like this one that the image of the beast mentioned in Revelations is the computer and that life will be breathed into it when we finally connect a bidirectional computer-brain interface chip to a human brain and connect it to a computer and the world wide web. I can think of no greater offense to God than this and no greater threat to man’s free will. We are almost there now and certainly will be by the end of the next decade. Our Redeemer is very near indeed.