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    Inside Your Mind, Scientist Can Eavesdrop on What You Hear

    By analyzing the brain, scientists can tell what words a person has just heard, research now reveals.

    Such work could one day allow scientists to eavesdrop on the internal monologues that run through our minds, or hear the imagined speech of those unable to speak.

    "This is huge for patients who have damage to their speech mechanisms because of a stroke or Lou Gehrig's disease and can't speak," said researcher Robert Knight at the University of California at Berkeley. "If you could eventually reconstruct imagined conversations from brain activity, thousands of people could benefit."

    Recent studies have shown that scientists could tell what number a person has just seen by carefully analyzing brain activity. They similarly could figure out how many dots a person was presented with.

    To see if they could do the same for sound, researchers focused on decoding electrical activity in a region of the human auditory system called the superior temporal gyrus, or STG. The 15 volunteers in the study were patients undergoing neurosurgery for epilepsy or brain tumor — as such, researchers could directly access the STG with electrodes and see how it responded to words in normal conversation that volunteers listened to.

    The scientists tested two different methods to match spoken sounds to the pattern of electrical activity they detected. The volunteers had recorded words played to them and the researchers used two different computational models to predict each word based on electrode recordings.

    [Video: The Computer That Can Read Your Mind]

    "Speech is full of rhythms, both fast and slow, and our models essentially looked at how the brain might encode these different rhythms," explained researcher Brian Pasley, a neuroscientist at the University of California at Berkeley. "One analogy is the AC or DC power in your home or car battery. In one case, the rhythms are coded by oscillating brain activity, AC mode, and in the other case, the rhythms are coded by changes in the overall level of brain activity, DC mode."

    The better of the two methods turned out to involve looking at the overall level of brain activity. "We found both models worked well for relatively slow speech rhythms like syllable rate, but for the faster rhythms in speech, like rapid onsets of syllables, the DC mode worked better," Pasley said.

    The researchers were able to reconstruct a sound close enough to the original word for the investigators to correctly guess the word better than chance. Future prosthetic devices "could either synthesize the actual sound a person is thinking, or just write out the words with a type of interface device," Pasley said.

    "I didn't think it could possibly work, but Brian did it," Knight said. "His computational model can reproduce the sound the patient heard and you can actually recognize the word, although not at a perfect level."

    To be clear, "we are only decoding sounds a person actually hears, not what they are imagining or thinking," Pasley told TechNewsDaily. "This research is not mind-reading or thought-reading — we can decode the sounds people are actually listening to but we cannot tell what they are thinking to themselves. Some evidence suggests that the same brain regions activate when we listen to sounds and when we imagine sounds, but we don't yet have a good understanding of how similar those two situations really are."

    A major step "would be to extend this approach to internal verbalizations, but we don't yet know if that is possible," Pasley acknowledged. "If it were possible, the brain signals required for this are currently only accessible through invasive procedures."

    Still, a great deal of work on developing safe and practical brain prosthetic devices has been done, which could be used with these procedures. "As this technology improves, these devices will become practical for the severely disabled," Pasley said.

    Pasley did caution this research could not currently be used "for interrogations or any other thought-reading, because at this stage we are only looking at someone's perceptual experience, not their internal verbalizations. If that becomes possible in the future, the procedure requires an invasive medical implant."

    The scientists detailed their findings online Jan. 31 in the journal PLoS Biology.

    This story was provided by InnovationNewsDaily, a sister site to LiveScience.

     

    67 comments

    • Chris  •  3 mths ago
      Today inside the mind of Chris: Sex, sex, sex, sex, coffee, food, sex, sex, yahoo, facebook, sex, sex, cookie, sex.
      • I ROBOT 3 mths ago
        You can read my mind!
    • ddn  •  3 mths ago
      Ahh this will make the TSA screening alittle bit faster i suppose.. full body scans, mind reads, i'm surprised they don't brand you while they are at it..
    • jason  •  Sacramento, California  •  3 mths ago
      Wait till the military gets a hold of this..
    • William  •  3 mths ago
      Hmmm... How fantastic this could be for those who need it.
      And how very...Orwellian... in the hands of some totalitarian regime.
      "Thought police", anyone?
      • StrangeBird 3 mths ago
        My thoughts exactly...wait- how did you know what I was thinking?!?
    • The Sage  •  Boca Raton, Florida  •  3 mths ago
      We need the Supreme Court to rule that you cannot listen in without a search warrant.
    • QQ  •  3 mths ago
      Guess I'd better start figuring out how to post a NO TRESPASSING sign before they figure out how to hear the voices in my head.
    • Ricky  •  3 mths ago
      I'm still waiting for them to come up with a way for me to record what I dream at night so I can watch it when I'm awake.
      • Muzc Geek 3 mths ago
        That would be cool!
      • just another guy 3 mths ago
        Be careful there, a crime is committed and it matches one of your dreams stored in the National Dream Database. Be careful of what you dream of, it just may come true.
      • EdithT 3 mths ago
        You ARE awake when you are dreaming ;-)

        Study Lucid Dreaming Techniques
    • Michael  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  3 mths ago
      They tried this on Sarah Palin and only got dead silence.
    • J  •  Columbus, Ohio  •  3 mths ago
      Our minds are the only "free" place we have left
    • Dominus  •  Pompano Beach, Florida  •  3 mths ago
      Awsome for it's benefits... extremely frightening for it's misuse.
    • Heath  •  3 mths ago
      That's nothing, my wife has been reading my mind for years.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Kalamazoo, Michigan  •  3 mths ago
      Exactly what I need. Someone knowing exactly what I think. Actually we got this technology already. It is called in my case, an ex-wife.
    • Yoohoo  •  3 mths ago
      Some people do not need a mind reader, they think out loud.
    • ......  •  3 mths ago
      who are the brain police? by frank zappa
    • richard  •  Kalamazoo, Michigan  •  3 mths ago
      The thought of the government one day using this technology to read our minds truly scares me
    • Neutron Solstice  •  3 mths ago
      For my Wife it's easy you just pour information in one ear and get the information out the other ear
    • carlo  •  Brooklyn, New York  •  3 mths ago
      The ultimate in invasion of privacy.
      Free thought will be a thing of the past.
    • Paul  •  3 mths ago
      What's is it really used for, that is the question?
    • Sophie  •  Dillsburg, Pennsylvania  •  3 mths ago
      Jus what we need: more ways the police and government can invade our privacy and lives.
    • AwakeAlertOrientedx3  •  3 mths ago
      I can't wait until they invent a true lie detector which could replay the scene of the crime for the jury to watch.
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