
Dr. Zara Bergstrom and Dr. Jon Simons examine the electrical brain activity of another of the paper’s authors, Marie Buda. (PHOTO: UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE’S DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHOLOGY)
Perpetrators can suppress “crime memories,” study finds
It sounds just like something out of a sci-fi police procedural show—and not necessarily a good one.
In a darkened room, a scientist in a white lab coat attaches a web of suction cups, wires, and electrodes to a crime suspect’s head. The suspect doesn’t blink as he tells the detectives interrogating him, “I didn’t do it.”
The grizzled head detective bangs his fist on the table. “We know you did!” he yells.
The scientist checks his machine. “Either he’s telling the truth … or he’s actively suppressing his memories of the crime,” says the scientist.
“Dammit,” says the detective, shaking his head, “this one’s good.”
But it isn’t fiction. Some law enforcement agencies really are using brain-scan lie detectors, and it really is possible to beat them, new research shows.
The polygraph, the more familiar lie detection method, works by “simultaneously recording changes in several physiological variables such as blood pressure, pulse rate, respiration, electrodermal activity,” according to a very intriguing group called the International League of Polygraph Examiners. Despite what the League (and television) might have you believe, polygraph results are generally believed to be unreliable, and are only admitted as evidence in U.S. courts in very specific circumstances.
The brain-scan “guilt detection test” is a newer technology that supposedly measures electrical activity in the brain, which would be triggered by specific memories during an interrogation. “When presented with reminders of their crime, it was previously assumed that their brain would automatically and uncontrollably recognize these details,” explains a new study published last week by psychologists at the University of Cambridge. “Using scans of the brain’s electrical activity, this recognition would be observable, recording a ‘guilty’ response.”
Law enforcement agencies in Japan and India have started to use this tool to solve crimes, and even to try suspects in court. These types of tests have not caught on with law enforcement in the U.S., though they are commercially available here. That’s probably a good thing; the researchers of this study found that “some people can intentionally and voluntarily suppress unwanted memories.”
The experiment was pretty straightforward, and the participants were no criminal masterminds. Ordinary people were asked to stage mock crimes, and then were asked to “suppress” their “crime memories,” all while having their brains scanned for electric activity. Most people could do it, the researchers found: “a significant proportion of people managed to reduce their brain’s recognition response and appear innocent.”
The Latest Bing News on:
Brain-Scan Lie Detectors
- You Own Your MRI Brainscan; Do Something Interesting With Iton January 15, 2021 at 4:00 pm
The most complicated and fascinating gadget you will ever own is your brain. Why not pay tribute to this wonder by creating a 3D scale model that you can print yourself? If you have had a full ...
- New scan detects early signs of lung canceron November 27, 2020 at 4:00 pm
Most lung cancer deaths are due to late detection of the disease. Only 10 per cent of newly diagnosed sufferers in Europe live beyond five years. However, previous attempts to introduce large ...
- The dental test to put you off smokingon November 26, 2020 at 4:00 pm
The powder dissolves in the saliva leaving a fluid that ranges in colour from clear, indicating no nicotine detection, to deep yellow or brown, where a lot has been found. This is compared to a ...
- Frequently Asked Questionson August 20, 2020 at 9:42 am
If you have long hair, try to wear it in a style that will allow you to lie comfortably on your back—high ponytails ... can be a little bit uncomfortable because the emitters and detectors have to be ...
- Frequently Asked Questionson June 16, 2018 at 12:29 pm
If you have long hair, try to wear it in a style that will allow you to lie comfortably on your back—high ponytails ... can be a little bit uncomfortable because the emitters and detectors have to be ...
- How Brain Science May Changeon February 15, 2011 at 9:16 am
But there could be a day when you meet a guy, have a few dates, then go in for a brain scan to determine if you're "in like" or ... Another legal area that's getting what you might call "neurocized" ...
The Latest Google Headlines on:
Brain-Scan Lie Detectors
The Latest Bing News on:
Crime memories
- Domestic Violence Survivor On Pandemic Spike: 'You Are Drowning'on January 21, 2021 at 7:49 pm
"When you can't get away, when there is no sense of normalcy or access to the outside world to balance the insanity, you are drowning." ...
- Painful memories linger on 1 year after Rachel Henry allegedly killed her childrenon January 20, 2021 at 10:10 pm
Police say Rachel Henry confessed to smothering her own children in Phoenix. And one year later, the death penalty remains on the table if she’s convicted.
- “I would do anything to have them back," Painful memories 1 year after Rachel Henry allegedly murders 3 childrenon January 20, 2021 at 9:58 pm
According to police, the children's mother, Rachel Henry admitted to smothering each child, singing nursery rhymes to two of them as she killed them. “It’s a nightmare, it’s horrible it’s a nightmare, ...
- Report Aims at ‘Reconciling’ France and Algeria, Its Former Colonyon January 20, 2021 at 11:48 am
A government-commissioned study offers proposals to address longstanding grievances. But it does not recommend an official apology and skirts the issue of systemic torture by French troops.
- All the moments in Sex and the City 2 that proved it was an actual crime against humanityon January 19, 2021 at 9:28 am
WHO ALLOWED THIS MOVIE TO HAPPEN It was recently announced Sex and the City would be getting a reboot, sans Samantha, and it’s been all the internet has talked about for a week since. But much like ...
- Bong Joon Ho’s MEMORIES OF MURDER Gets New 4K Criterion Collection Blu-ray in Aprilon January 18, 2021 at 8:00 am
The Criterion Collection will release Bong Joon Ho's classic crime thriller Memories of Murder on 4K Blu-ray and DVD on April 20th ...
- Raskin discusses impeachment, memories of late son on CNNon January 18, 2021 at 6:48 am
Raskin called Trump’s actions the “most serious presidential crime in the history of the United States of America.” [Baltimore Sun] Self-proclaimed white supremacist arrested in Capitol riot ...
- Maryland Rep. Jamie Raskin discusses impeachment strategy, memories of his late son during CNN appearanceon January 17, 2021 at 4:25 pm
Maryland Rep. Jamie Raskin will lead the prosecution against Pres. Donald Trump during his second impeachment trial. During an appearance on CNN, Raskin discussed preparing while grieving the loss of ...
- Criterion Adds Boon Joon Ho’s ‘ Memories Of Murder,’ ‘Irma Vep,’ ‘History Is Made At Night’ & More In Aprilon January 16, 2021 at 8:05 am
This is to say that the monthly release announcements by The Criterion Collection are always worth being excited about, and April 2021 is no different. Read More: ‘ Memories Of Murder ’: Bong Joon Ho ...
- With memories of 2020 armed protests, Michigan lawmakers fear weekend violence at state Capitolon January 13, 2021 at 2:02 pm
LANSING — In the shadow of a towering cast-iron dome, dozens of state police patrolled the perimeter of Michigan’s state Capitol as lawmakers returned to work on Wednesday morning, a sense of calm ...