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Mind Wars:

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Training honeybees to detect explosives and other 'odors of interest' ... 'Enhanced Human Performance' project to make warfighter more endurant, better able to heal ' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mind Wars:


1
Mind Wars Brain Research and National Defense
Jonathan D. Moreno David and Lyn Silfen
University Professor
Date
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National Research Council, August 13, 2008
  • Committee on Military and Intelligence
    Methodology for Emergent Physiological
    andCognitive/Neural Science Research in the Next
    Two Decades
  • Client Defense Intelligence Agency

4
National Research Council Spring 2009
  • Committee on Field Evaluation of Behavioral and
    Cognitive Sciences-Based Methods andTools for
    Intelligence and Counter-Intelligence
  • Clients are DIA and the Office of the Department
    of National Intelligence
  • Goal of workshop Describe the barriers to field
    validation of analytic and counter-intelligence
    tools.
  • Example Portable lie-detector
  • Preliminary Credibility Screening System
    (PCASS)

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Henry A. Murray
  • Father of personality theory
  • Director of Harvard Psychological Clinic
  • Explorations in Personality, 1938
  • Developed Thematic Apperception Test for the US
    Army during WWII
  • First chief psychologist in the OSS
  • Assessment of Men, 1948

8
Allen Dulles
  • Legendary CIA director
  • Commissioned Wolf-Hinkle report on brain
    washing, 1953
  • Subsequently supported various hallucinogenic and
    innovative human experiments

9
Sidney Gottlieb
  • CIA spymaster
  • Developed toxic items for assassination (Castro,
    Patrice Lumumba)
  • Funded hallucinogen experiments
  • Architect of MKUltra program

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Frank Olson
  • CIA anthrax expert assigned to Fort Detrick
  • Given LSD
  • Descended to his death from a Manhattan hotel,
    1953

12
The Case of Harold Blaur
  • NY tennis pro, 42 y.o.
  • Admitted to NY State Psychiatric Institute for
    depression, January 1953
  • Unconsented mescaline experiment funded by US
    Army Chemical Corps
  • Died after overdose
  • Covered up, LSD aspect revealed in Ford
    administration, compensation to adult children
    1978

13
Henry Beecher
  • Icon of human research ethics
  • Harvard anesthesiology professor
  • Work on LSD supported by CIA
  • Reported foreign science contacts to CIA through
    the 1950s

14
Harvard and the Unibomber
  • Experiment in personality deconstruction of
    Harvard undergrads
  • Humiliation technique
  • Ted Kaczynski was a subject

15
The Professor and the Unibomber
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Kurt Lewin
  • Founder of modern social psychology
  • Advised OSS on psychological warfare
  • Perhaps up to a third of major research
    university faculty were supported by security
    agencies after WWII

17
J.B. Rhine
  • Distinguished Duke U. parapsychology researcher
  • ESP studies
  • CIA supported starting in 1952
  • Psiops

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U.S. Test of Simulated Non-Lethal Mortar Round,
2002(Image from Project Sunshine)
21
The Moscow Theater Tragedy, October 2002
  • Chechen terrorists occupy Russian theater during
    play
  • Fentanyl pumped into the heating ducts
  • Emergency teams not informed of the nature of the
    agent
  • 128 die

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Reading Hidden Intentions in the Human Brain
Haynes, J. -D. et al. Current Biology 17,
323-328 (2007)
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Kay, K. N., Naselaris, T., Prenger, R. J.
Gallant, J. L. Nature advanced online publication
doi10.1038/nature067,15 March 2008).
  • In the experiment, the brain activity
  • of two subjects was monitored while
  • they were shown 1,750 different
  • pictures. The team then selected 120
  • novel images that the subjects hadnt
  • seen before, and used the previous
  • results to predict their brain
  • responses. When the test subjects
  • were shown one of the images, the
  • team could match the actual brain
  • response to their predictions to
  • accurately pick out which of the
  • pictures they had been shown. With
  • one of the participants they were
  • correct 72 of the time, and with the
  • other 92 of the time on chance
  • alone they would have been right only
  • 0.8 of the time.

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Non-invasive Brain Imaging
  • Uses fMRI (oxygenation) or PET scans (glucose)
  • Correlations of neurochemistry with behavior
  • NIRS (Near Infrared Spectroscopy) cheaper and
    portable, also records oxygenation but poor
    temporal resolution

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Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation
  • Induces changes in brain activation
  • Could be used to alter a persons social behavior
    or attitudes
  • Influence brain functions including physical
    movement, visual perception, memory, reaction
    time, speech and mood

27
  • 3 billion budget
  • Developed internet, stealth bomber
  • Dedicated to long-range innovation through
    speculative technical possibilities
  • Various current neuroscience projects

28
Neuroimaging and the Head Web
  • Noninvasive brain monitoring devices
  • Contract Head Access Laminar Optoelectronic
    Neuroimaging System
  • Contract Wireless Near-Infrared Devices for
    Neural Monitoring in Operational Environments
  • Security and medical uses

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Neuromics DARPAs Mind-Machine Interface
Programs
  • Training honeybees to detect explosives and other
    odors of interest
  • The electronic dogs nose to develop electronic
    devices that can sniff out explosives as well as
    dogs.
  • Improved battlefield vision technology based on
    fly eyes
  • Enhanced Human Performance project to make
    warfighter more endurant, better able to heal
  • Continuous Assisted Performance project to
    enable fighters to stay awake and alert 24/7

31
AugCog, DARPA, 2002
  • will develop the technologies needed to measure
    and track a subjects cognitive state in
    real-time
  • enhance operational capability, support reduction
    in the numbers of persons required to perform
    current functions, and improve human performance
    in stressful environments
  • E.g., cockpit design a computer-based command
    environment (working memory), an unmanned combat
    vehicle (executive function), a combat vehicle
    (sensory input), and an integrated individual
    combat system (attention).

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Cognitive Threat Warning SystemLukes
Binoculars
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Cyborgs
  • At a certain point the neural system integrates
    the information encoded on an implanted chip
  • What does this mean for the research
    participants capacity? Has the participants
    identity been altered?

35
The Roborat
36
No Bull Jose Delgados Stimoceiver, 1958
37
Modafinil (Provigil)
  • Possible replacement for amphetamines

38
The Anti-Conscience Pill
  • Beta blockers can be used to treat stress,
    prevent PTSD
  • Suppress release of hormones like norephinephrine
    that help encode memory
  • Might also reduce guilt feelings

39
The trust drug?
  • Natural oxytocin production is associated with
    trust behavior
  • May be artificially administered in a spray to
    encourage cooperation
  • Use in interrogations?

40
Scientists Use of Brain EnhancersNature 450,
11571159 2007
  • 20 of readers reported using at least one of
    these for non-medical reasons
  • Ritalin (62)
  • Modafinil (44
  • Beta blockers (15)

41
Emerging Cognitive Neuroscience and Related
Technologies (National Academies Press, 2008)
  • The Big Picture Bridging the Science and
    Technology for the Decision Maker
  • Current Cognitive Neuroscience Research and
    Technology Selected Areas of Interest
  • Challenges to the Detection of Psychological
    States and Intentions via Neurophysiological
    Activity
  • Neuropsychopharmacology
  • Functional Neuroimaging
  • Emerging Areas of Cognitive Neuroscience and
    Neurotechnologies

42
Summary
  • The intelligence community (IC) faces the
    challenging task of analyzing extremely large
    amounts of information on cognitive neuroscience
    and neurotechnology, deciding which of that
    information has national security implications,
    and then assigning priorities for decision
    makers. It is also challenged to keep pace with
    rapid scientific advances that can only be
    understood through close and continuing
    collaboration with experts from the scientific
    community, from the corporate world, and from
    academia. The situation will become more complex
    as the volume of information continues to grow.
    The Committee was tasked by the Technology
    Warning Division of the Defense Intelligence
    Agencys (DIAs) Defense Warning Office to
    identify areas of cognitive neuroscience and
    related technologies that will develop over the
    next two decades and that could have military
    applications that might also be of interest to
    the IC.

43
Tasks
  • Review the current state of today's work in
    neurophysiology and cognitive/ neural science,
    select the manners in which this work could be of
    interest to national security professionals, and
    trends for future warfighting applications that
    may warrant continued analysis and tracking by
    the intelligence community,
  • Use the technology warning methodology developed
    in the 2005 National Research Council report
    Avoiding Surprise in an Era of Global Technology
    Advances (NRC, 2005) to assess the health, rate
    of development, and degree of innovation in the
    neurophysiology and cognitive/neural science
    research areas of interest, and
  • Amplify the technology warning methodology to
    illustrate the ways in which neurophysiological
    and cognitive/neural research conducted in
    selected countries may affect committee
    assessments.

44
Thank you!
  • University of Pennsylvania
  • Center for Bioethics
  • Center for Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Department of History and Sociology of Science
  • Dana Foundation
  • Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  • National Research Council

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