Brain fingerprinting field studies comparing P300-MERMER and P300 brainwave responses in the detection of concealed information

被引:0
|
作者
Lawrence A. Farwell
Drew C. Richardson
Graham M. Richardson
机构
[1] Government Works,Department of Cell and Developmental Biology
[2] Inc.,undefined
[3] Brainwave Science,undefined
[4] Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Laboratory,undefined
[5] Vanderbilt University,undefined
来源
Cognitive Neurodynamics | 2013年 / 7卷
关键词
Brain fingerprinting; P300-MERMER; P300; Event-related potential; Detection of concealed information; MERMER;
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Brain fingerprinting detects concealed information stored in the brain by measuring brainwave responses. We compared P300 and P300-MERMER event-related brain potentials for error rate/accuracy and statistical confidence in four field/real-life studies. 76 tests detected presence or absence of information regarding (1) real-life events including felony crimes; (2) real crimes with substantial consequences (either a judicial outcome, i.e., evidence admitted in court, or a $100,000 reward for beating the test); (3) knowledge unique to FBI agents; and (4) knowledge unique to explosives (EOD/IED) experts. With both P300 and P300-MERMER, error rate was 0 %: determinations were 100 % accurate, no false negatives or false positives; also no indeterminates. Countermeasures had no effect. Median statistical confidence for determinations was 99.9 % with P300-MERMER and 99.6 % with P300. Brain fingerprinting methods and scientific standards for laboratory and field applications are discussed. Major differences in methods that produce different results are identified. Markedly different methods in other studies have produced over 10 times higher error rates and markedly lower statistical confidences than those of these, our previous studies, and independent replications. Data support the hypothesis that accuracy, reliability, and validity depend on following the brain fingerprinting scientific standards outlined herein.
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页码:263 / 299
页数:36
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