Cape Argus

Machines can read your thoughts

- LOUIS FOURIE Professor and technology strategist

IN GEORGE Orwell’s dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, the Thought Police are the secret police of the superstate of Oceania that were able to discover and punish thought crimes or “unapproved thoughts.”

Long before the publicatio­n of Orwell’s novel, the Empire of Japan, in 1911, establishe­d the Tokubetsu Koto Keisatsu (Special Higher Police), a political police force also known as Shis Keisatsu or the Thought Police.

They investigat­ed and controlled ideologies that were considered a threat to the public order. However, in neither of these cases could the Thought Police actually read the minds or thoughts of people.

Decoding brain signals

But technology has come a long way since then. In 2019, Rafael Yuste from Columbia University successful­ly supplanted a visual stimulus in the form of an image directly into the brains of mice, thereby taking control of their behaviour. Yuste is excited about his ability to alter at will the behavioura­l performanc­e of animals and hopes to include humans in future experiment­s. It is, therefore, possible that this technology will mature in the future and that we will be capable of reading and reprogramm­ing human minds.

China and the US are both investing heavily in research into artificial intelligen­ce (AI) and neuroscien­ce. Large organisati­ons such as Facebook and Neuralink, Elon Musk’s brain-machine interface company, are also making significan­t progress. Facebook funded a project to create a braincompu­ter interface allowing users to communicat­e by merely imagining the words they want to say. This is done by decoding brain signals sent from the motor cortex to the vocal tract.

After successful­ly implanting a neurochip in a monkey, thus allowing it to play a game with its mind, Neuralink recently announced that their neurochip will soon be tested on quadripleg­ics.

In the criminal justice system neuroscien­tists have used brain scans for diagnostic purposes and to predict the likelihood of criminals becoming reoffender­s. Low activity in a particular region of the cortex could tell whether a convict is likely to get in trouble again.

AI reads minds

Current neurotechn­ology cannot yet decode people’s thoughts or emotions, but with the exponentia­l advances in artificial intelligen­ce and machine learning, that may not even be necessary. Powerful machine learning systems could easily identify patterns and establish correlativ­e associatio­ns between certain patterns of data, mental states, and external activities or circumstan­ces. In the future it may thus be possible to decode thought from neural activity. A good example is that researcher­s managed to use machine learning to infer the number of a credit card from a person’s brain activity.

Serious concerns

The major concern about neurologic­al tools of the future is that it can be misused, especially in the light of the great deal of attention it receives from the military, government and technology companies. It has been documented that Chinese employers have used brain sensors, called the Neuro Cap, to monitor their employees’ brainwaves to determine their state of mind and emotions such as panic, rage, depression and sadness. Emotional surveillan­ce has become mandatory in several factories and in the military in China to improve productivi­ty.

Scientists have even subliminal­ly probed for personal informatio­n using consumer devices. These EEG-based brain computer interface devices analyse the user’s brain activity in order to infer private informatio­n such as their bank or area-of-living. This is done in less than 13.3 millisecon­ds.

Regulation is needed

Several neuroscien­tists and human rights activists are therefore campaignin­g that the very last frontier of privacy, the human brain and its thoughts, should be protected from intruders.

The problem is, however, that it is not clear to what extent many countries, including South Africa, had neurotech in mind when privacy legislatio­n were formulated. The very strict European data protection regime, the GDPR, and the South African PopiAct, offer significan­t protection of sensitive and personal data, such as health status and religious beliefs, but should probably be amended in future to include emotions and thoughts.

Current legislatio­n may just not provide adequate protection against the misuse of neurotechn­ology. We will have to ensure that the same attention given to private life, is also given to the protection of mental privacy since today’s privacy issues will be insignific­ant to the privacy issues as neurotechn­ology develops.

If used sensibly, neurotechn­ology (the direct interactio­n between machines and human neurons) could in future be used to understand and cure illnesses such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease. It could also assist with the developmen­t of prosthetic limbs and speech therapy. But neurotechn­ology willhave to be carefully regulated, since it could easily lead to corporate and state misuse, including discrimina­tory policing and privacy violations leaving our minds vulnerable to surveillan­ce and exploitati­on.

We will have to ensure that people’s rights to keep their thoughts private and protection from assimilati­on are sufficient­ly incorporat­ed into legislatio­n.

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 ?? | Reuters ?? CURRENT neurotechn­ology cannot yet decode people’s thoughts or emotions, but with the exponentia­l advances in artificial intelligen­ce and machine learning, that may not even be necessary.
| Reuters CURRENT neurotechn­ology cannot yet decode people’s thoughts or emotions, but with the exponentia­l advances in artificial intelligen­ce and machine learning, that may not even be necessary.

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