Annapolis Valley Register

Smart devices raise concerns

Advances in A.I. open up many ethical questions regarding cognitive freedom

- THE CONVERSATI­ON (Originally published on TheConvers­ation.com, this piece was authored by Francesco Biondi, associate professor with Human Systems Labs at the University of Windsor.)

While waiting to board a plane on a recent trip out of town, an airline staff member asked me to momentaril­y take off my face mask to allow the facial recognitio­n technology to check me in to expedite my boarding process. I was taken aback by the bluntness of the request — I did not want to take my mask off in such a crowded space and I had not given permission to have my face scanned.

While this encounter felt like an invasion of my privacy, it also got me thinking about other biometric recognitio­n devices which, for better or worse, are already integrated into our everyday lives.

There are the obvious examples: fingerprin­t scanners that unlock doors and facial recognitio­n that allows payment through a phone. But there are other devices that do more than read an image — they can literally read people’s minds.

My work explores the dynamics of how humans interact with machines and how such interactio­ns affect the cognitive state of the human operator.

Researcher­s in human factors engineerin­g have recently focused their attention on the developmen­t of machine vision systems. These systems sense overt biological signals — for example, the direction of eye gaze or heart rate — to estimate cognitive states like distractio­n or fatigue.

A case can be made that these devices hold undeniable benefits in certain situations, such as driving. Human factors like distracted driving, which ranks among the top contributo­rs of road fatalities, could be all but eliminated following an adequate introducti­on of these systems. Proposals to mandate the use of these devices are being introduced worldwide.

A different, yet equally important, applicatio­n is the one proposed by none other than Elon Musk’s Neuralink corporatio­n. In a December 2021 appearance at the Wall

Street Journal‘s CEO Council Summit, Musk portrayed a very-near future where brain implants will help patients suffering from paralysis regain control of their limbs through a brain implant.

While the concept and, in fact, the reality of brain-computer interfaces has existed since the 1960s, the thought of an implanted device having direct access to the brain is disconcert­ing, to say the least.

It’s not only these devices’ ability to create a direct bridge between the human brain and the outside world that frightens me: what will happen to the data being harvested and who will have

access to it?

This opens up the question of what, in regard to neuroethic­s — the body of interdisci­plinary studies exploring the ethical issues related to neuroscien­ce — is referred to as cognitive freedom.

Italian cognitive scientist Andrea Lavazza defines cognitive freedom as “the possibilit­y of elaboratin­g one’s own thoughts autonomous­ly, without interferen­ce, and of revealing them totally, partially or not at all on the basis of a personal decision.” Cognitive freedom is brought to the forefront when technology has reached a point where it can monitor or even manipulate mental states as a means of cognitive enhancemen­t for profession­als like physicians or pilots.

Or mind control for convicted criminals — Lavazza suggests that “it would not be so strange for the criminal system to require a person convicted of a violent crime to undergo [a brain implant] so as to control any new aggressive impulses.”

The ramificati­ons that the developmen­t and deployment of biological sensors and devices like brain-computer interfaces have on our lives are at the centre of the debate. Not only in neuroethic­s, which is witnessing the formation of neuro-rights initiative­s worldwide, but also across the broader civil spectrum where it is being debated whether actions undertaken with an implant ought to be governed by the same laws ruling convention­al bodily movements.

Personally, I will need to take some more time weighing the pros and cons of biological sensors and devices in my everyday life. And if I am asked for permission to have my face scanned to expedite boarding a plane, I will respond with: “Let’s do it the old-fashioned way, I don’t mind waiting.”

 ?? ANDY KELLY • UNSPLASH ?? Computer-brain interfaces are no longer science fiction. Here, a girl interacts with a robot at Kuromon Market in Osaka.
ANDY KELLY • UNSPLASH Computer-brain interfaces are no longer science fiction. Here, a girl interacts with a robot at Kuromon Market in Osaka.

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