![]() | |||||||||||
![]() | |||||||||||
![]() | |||||||||||
|
|||||||||||
![]() | |||||||||||
![]() | |||||||||||
![]() | |||||||||||
|
|
Using Brain MERMER Testing to Detect Knowledge Despite Efforts to Conceal
Lawrence A.
Farwell, Ph.D. Chairman
and Chief Scientist Brain Fingerprinting Laboratories, Inc. and Sharon S.
Smith Supervisory Special Agent, Behavioral Science Unit, FBI
Reference: Farwell, L. A. and Smith, S. S.
(2001). Using Brain MERMER Testing to Detect Concealed Knowledge Despite Efforts
to Conceal. Journal of
Forensic Sciences 46,1:1-9 The views and opinions expressed herein are solely the authors' and do not necessarily state or reflect those of the United States Government or any agency thereof.
USING MERMER TO DETECT KNOWLEDGE ABSTRACT This experiment examined the accuracy and
reliability of the MERMER technique for detecting information related to events
subjects have experienced, despite subjects' efforts to conceal that
knowledge. Information obtained through
interviews was used to develop stimulus sets consisting of words and phrases
presented to subjects visually by computer.
Sets were composed of three types of stimuli: life experience-related (Probes), stimuli the subject was asked
to memorize and respond to (Targets), and irrelevant information
(Irrelevants). Each set of stimuli was
tested on two individuals: (1) one individual who had participated in the event
in question -- and thus had the relevant information stored in his/her brain,
and (2) one who had not. Six subjects
were tested. Electrical brain responses
to the stimuli were recorded non-invasively from the scalp and analyzed. MERMERs (memory and encoding related
multifaceted electroencephalographic responses), of which the P300 is a
sub-component, were used to determine whether the subject had the relevant
information stored in his brain (information present) or not (information absent),
thus indicating whether or not each subject had participated in the real-life
event in question. Bootstrapping was
used to analyze and compare the responses to the three types of stimuli. As predicted, MERMERs were elicited by Probe
stimuli only in the subjects who had participated in the investigated event, by
Target stimuli in all subjects, and in no case by Irrelevant stimuli. For each of the six subjects, brain MERMER
testing correctly determined whether the subject had participated in and
consequently knew about the event in question (information present) or had not
participated (information absent). The
statistical confidence for this determination was 99.9 percent in five cases
and 90.0 percent in one case. The
article concludes with a discussion of areas of future research and the
potential for using this new technology as an investigative tool in criminal
and espionage cases. KEYWORDS:
forensic science, multifaceted
electroencephalographic response analysis, memory and encoding related
multifaceted electroencephalographic response, psychophysiological detection of
information, electroencephalograph, criminal investigation, brain waves The purpose of this paper is two-fold: (1) to report results of preliminary
research on brain MERMER (memory and encoding related multifaceted
electroencephalographic response) testing, a new technology that may be capable
of linking evidence of a crime to information stored in the brain of the person
who committed the crime, and (2) to encourage more research on this technology,
which offers the promise of providing an accurate and scientific means of tying
perpetrators to crimes and verifying the claims of those who were not
involved. This technology evaluates the
presence or absence of information/evidence in the one place where a
comprehensive record of every crime is stored -- the brain of the perpetrator. Several major breakthroughs in criminal
investigation precede brain MERMER testing. The development of a fingerprint
classification system enables investigators to use the uniqueness of human
fingerprints to place a suspect at a crime scene, as long as special procedures
are applied to collect and preserve fingerprint evidence properly. Recent advances in DNA research allow
investigators to connect biological evidence that is collected at the crime
scene with evidence from the body of the criminal. Like fingerprinting, DNA can be successfully used only when
investigators collect and preserve the specific kind of evidence demanded by the
technique. Both DNA and fingerprinting
have been highly successful in identifying offenders and in eliminating
innocent suspects, but both are found only in a very small percentage of cases. Investigators' need for other accurate,
scientific means of linking perpetrators with crime scene evidence has inspired
some scientists to ask, "What does the criminal always take with him from
the crime scene that records his involvement in the crime?" The answer to this question, of course, is
the brain. Physical evidence may or may
not be present, but the brain of the criminal is always there, recording the
events, in some ways like a video camera. Until recently, there has been no way to
detect this record stored in the brain.
Might it be possible to utilize the brain as a source of information
that would accurately reveal a suspect's presence at a crime scene? This paper reports the scientific progress,
to date, in answering this question, and presents a test of the science of
brain MERMER testing in detecting participation in real-life events. Although brain MERMER testing is a new
science, the evidence reported here, and in several other studies, suggests
that recent advances in neuroscience allow scientists to detect information
stored in the brain -- information that potentially could scientifically,
objectively, non-invasively, and accurately connect a criminal with a specific
criminal act. Recent research has shown that electrical
brain responses can be a reliable indicator of information-processing
activities in the brain. This may mean
that measurements of such brain activity might tap information that could
uniquely identify perpetrators and others, such as witnesses, involved in many
types of crimes. This could conserve
law enforcement personnel and financial resources, as well as provide a source
of new leads. Conversely, the
information from these measurements could steer investigators away from
innocent individuals. The invention of brain MERMER testing was
based on recent progress in neuroscience, particularly in
electroencephalography -- a non-invasive measurement of electrical brain
activity. The recent history of
electroencephalography can be compared to the old story of the blind men and
the elephant. As the story goes, a
group of blind men set out to investigate the nature of an elephant. One comes upon the trunk, another the tusk,
another the leg, another the ear, another the side, another the foot, and still
another the tail. When they compare
notes, they each report accurately on what they have observed, yet they each
have a different impression of what an elephant is like. Brain waves, like elephants, have many
different facets. The facet observed
depends upon the method of observation and data analysis. The most obvious feature of brain waves is
the multiple superimposed oscillations that the brain emits at different
frequencies. These oscillations are
ordinarily measured over a span of minutes or longer. Different frequencies of brain waves measured in this way have
been named alpha waves, beta waves, etc.
They can be used to distinguish gross states such as waking, sleeping,
dreaming, and coma. They also can
reveal certain information about the level of functioning and activation of the
brain, as well as certain brain injuries. In the last several decades, scientists
have developed computerized methods of looking at changes in brain waves that
take place over very short periods of time, e.g., on the order of one second
(1). This short time scale is necessary
in order to examine brain-wave phenomena that occur during
information-processing brain activity, which often takes place quite
quickly. Until recently, the
fundamental method of examining information-processing brain activity has been
signal averaging (2). A stimulus that
is processed by the brain (e.g., a word or a picture flashed on a computer
screen) is presented many times, and the brain-wave responses to the multiple
presentations are averaged. The
averaging process eliminates all activity that is not time-locked to the
stimulus. This process reveals
event-related brain potentials (ERPs) -- specific, simple, positive and
negative voltage changes that take place during the information processing of
the particular stimulus. This provides
a totally different picture than that provided by the frequency analysis
yielding alpha and beta waves. This is
like looking at an entirely different part of the elephant. Druckman and Lacy (3) have noted that,
within appropriate research paradigms, ERP responses allow experimental
psychologists to study processes that would be difficult to access by other
means. In the mid-1980s, researchers began to
focus on the P300 as a specific ERP component that had the potential for detecting
concealed information in the brain.
(The P300 is also known as P3 or Late Positive Complex. Sometimes it is considered to be comprised
of two separate components, P3a and P3b.)
Farwell and Donchin (4,5) used event-related brain potentials in the detection
of concealed information. "Farwell
and Donchin's work has revealed [that this] neurocognitive link may be engaged
automatically (i.e., out of the person's control), irrespective of either the
person's covert...or overt... expression to the contrary. If so, this provides a very powerful bridge
to detecting the possession of critical information." (6) Farwell and Donchin's (5) subjects
completed an interactive computer briefing in which they learned the details of
a mock espionage scenario. After this
briefing, subjects actually performed the scenario. The subjects were tested the next day on their knowledge of the
scenario in which they participated and one in which they did not
participate. Stimuli presented to test the subjects were
classified into three categories:
Targets, Probes, and Irrelevants (the same categories, described below,
which were used in the research reported in this paper). Using a bootstrapping statistical analysis
technique (5,7,8,9), Farwell and Donchin analyzed and classified the ERPs of
the 40 subjects (20 knowledgeable and 20 not knowledgeable). There were no false negatives, no false
positives, and 87.5 percent of the subjects were correctly classified as having
or not having the relevant information.
The remaining 12.5 percent were indeterminate. Rosenfeld and his colleagues
(10,11,12,13), and Allen and Iacono (14,15) achieved comparable results with
similar procedures using ERPs. Present-day brain MERMER testing,
including the data reported here as well as in four other studies by Farwell
and his colleagues (9,16,17,18,19,20,21), has achieved an even higher level of
accuracy than that achieved in the ERP studies. In all five of these MERMER studies, accuracy has been 100
percent with no false negatives, no false positives, and no
indeterminates. Three kinds of advances
beyond the original ERP studies have increased accuracy: 1) the development of
multifaceted electroencephalographic response analysis (MERA) and the discovery
of the memory and encoding related multifaceted electroencephalographic
response (MERMER), 2) advances in data acquisition procedures, and 3) advances
in testing methods and procedures. All
of these are described below and are described in more detail in Farwell
(9,19,20). The advances in information detection and
data analysis leading to the development of MERA and to brain MERMER testing
began with an analysis of the strengths and weaknesses of ERPs. Analyzing data through signal averaging to
detect ERPs offers the advantage that this process isolates certain simple
patterns of brain activity that take place while a specific stimulus is being
processed. ERPs are simple patterns
which often are not discernible in raw EEG data because these ERPs are
overwhelmed by the complicated activity taking place simultaneously with
them. The disadvantage of measuring
ERPs is that the process of signal averaging eliminates all of the complicated
patterns associated with information processing, leaving only the simple
voltage changes over time. In other
words, in the process of eliminating noise, a vast amount of meaningful signal
is eliminated as well. When the brain processes information, it
does not produce only the simple voltage changes that constitute ERPs. There are many other complex changes that
take place. These changes are
eliminated by signal averaging because the resulting patterns of electrical
activity are not phase-locked to the time of the stimulus, and thus they average
out to zero when many signals are averaged to produce ERPs. Many features of the brain-wave responses
are missed in ERP analysis either because they are eliminated by the signal
averaging process or because they are not discernible through visual inspection
of averaged responses. Returning to our story of the blind men
and the elephant, measuring ERPs is like walking the elephant through mud and
collecting the footprints. It gives a
very clear, solid picture of the feet, but loses all data about the rest of the
elephant. Recognition of the limitations inherent
in ERP measurement and analysis led to the development of multifaceted
electroencephalographic response analysis (MERA). MERA, like ERP analysis, analyzes specific, short-term segments
of brain-wave data elicited by information-processing brain activity. Unlike ERP analysis, MERA is multifaceted in
that it simultaneously examines multiple facets of the data. A specific multifaceted electroencephalographic
response (MER) may contain: (1) one or several ERP components, (2) phasic
changes in the frequency and dimensionality of the signal at a specific scalp
location or at multiple locations, and (3) changes in the relationship between
signals in different scalp locations measured by coherence, correlation, and
covariance. Using multifaceted
electroencephalographic response analysis (MERA), Farwell and his colleagues
(9,16,17,18,19,20,21) discovered that a specific multifaceted
electroencephalographic response (MER), known as a memory and encoding related
multifaceted electroencephalographic response (MERMER), is elicited when a
person recognizes and processes a stimulus that is particularly noteworthy to
him/her. The MERMER is the elephant of
which the P300 is the foot. (Recall
that the P300 is the ERP component used
in the original brain-wave information detection studies). The MERMER includes: (1) the P300, an
electrically positive component maximal at the parietal scalp site, (2)
another, longer latency, electrically negative subcomponent prominent at the
frontal scalp site, and (3) phasic changes in the frequency and structure of
the signal. (For a detailed discussion
of the MERMER, see 9). Farwell and his colleagues have developed
a system to use the MERMER to detect the presence or absence of specific
information stored in the brain. Recall
that the MERMER is elicited only by stimuli that are noteworthy or significant
for the subject. Stimuli that are
task-relevant (i.e., relevant to a task being performed) and stimuli that are
relatively rare naturally tend to stand out.
That is, they tend to be more noteworthy for the subject. The Farwell MERMER System utilizes this
feature of the MERMER through the following procedure. A sequence of words, phrases, or pictures is
presented on a video monitor under computer control. Each stimulus appears for
a fraction of a second. Three types of stimuli are
presented: Targets, Irrelevants, and
Probes. The Targets are made relevant
and noteworthy to all subjects, i.e., the subject is given a list of the Target
stimuli and instructed to press a particular button in response to Targets and
another button in response to all other stimuli. Since the relatively rare Targets are singled out in the task
being performed, the Targets are noteworthy for the subject, and each Target
stimulus elicits a MERMER. Most of the
non-Target stimuli are irrelevant, having no relation to the situation under
investigation. These Irrelevants do not
elicit a MERMER. Some of the non-Target stimuli are relevant to the situation under
investigation. These relevant stimuli
are referred to as Probes. For a
subject who has participated in the situation in question, the Probes are
noteworthy due to the subject's knowledge of that situation, and, therefore,
Probes elicit a MERMER when the subject is knowledgeable. Probes are indistinguishable from the
Irrelevants for a subject who is not knowledgeable about the situation under
investigation, and thus Probes do not elicit a MERMER if the subject is not
knowledgeable. In analyzing the data, the Farwell MERMER
System compares the responses to the three types of stimuli and computes a
determination of whether the Probe responses contain a MERMER (i.e., are
similar to the Target responses) or do not contain a MERMER (i.e., are similar
to the Irrelevant responses). The
system also computes a statistical confidence for this determination. (For a detailed discussion see
9,18,19,21,22). Using the MERMER, Farwell and Richardson
(see 9,18) conducted a study in which Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) new
agent trainees were presented Probes consisting of words, phrases, and acronyms
which only FBI Agents would know, along with Targets and Irrelevants. Non-FBI personnel were also tested. The Farwell MERMER System correctly
classified all 17 of the FBI new agent trainees. The four control subjects were also correctly classified. In 1992-93, Farwell and his colleagues
(21) conducted three experiments for the Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA). All three experiments used brain
responses to stimuli, consisting of Probes, Targets, and Irrelevants, to detect
concealed information stored in the brain.
The first experiment, using pictorial rather than verbal stimuli,
explored whether or not brain waves could be used effectively to detect prior
knowledge of information. The
information detected was relevant to a mock espionage scenario enacted by some
of the subjects, and the stimuli that elicited the brain responses were relevant
pictures presented on a computer screen.
In the second experiment, words, phrases, and acronyms were presented on
a computer screen to subjects, some of whom were U.S. Navy officers who were
experts in military medicine. The
information detected was relevant to knowledge of military medicine. The purpose of this experiment was to
determine whether this method could be useful in detecting members of a group
or organization, or people with a particular expertise (i.e., intelligence
agents). In the third experiment, which
also used visually presented words, the information detected was relevant to
real-life events, including two felony crimes.
All 79 subjects in the three experiments were correctly classified as
information present or information absent, i.e., as possessing or not possessing
the critical information. There were no
false positives, false negatives, or indeterminates. The original data analysis in these
experiments focused on the P300.
Farwell has since analyzed these same data using the MERMER. All subjects remained in the correct
categories; however, the confidence level improved. The research described in this paper was
conducted in 1993, and was, in part, a replication of the third experiment
Farwell did for the CIA. This research
differed from the CIA research in that, although the sample size was smaller,
each set of stimuli was tested on both a knowledgeable subject and a subject
who was not knowledgeable regarding the investigated event. This was done to determine if there was
anything inherent in the nature of the stimuli selected for each set that would
lend itself to a particular classification regardless of whether or not the
subject was knowledgeable about the event in question. Materials and Methods Subjects Three pairs of subjects, two females and
four males, were tested. Participants
ranged in age from their mid-20s to early 40s.
Pairs were not randomly selected.
Individuals in each pair were personally acquainted (i.e., pair one,
subjects A and B knew each other). All
subjects granted permission to have information about their life experiences
provided to researchers in this experiment.
Georgetown University's Review Board reviewed a description of this
experiment and granted permission for these procedures to be used on human
subjects. Data from one subject were eliminated due
to the subject's not understanding, and consequently not following, the
directions. Another subject was
substituted for this individual. (The
authors chose to substitute another subject, rather than to re-explain the
instructions and obtain additional data from the same subject, in order to
maintain scientific control so that all subjects would undergo exactly the same
procedure in this research study. In a
field application, if a subject does not understand the instructions, those
instructions can be reiterated or elaborated upon, and valid data can then be
collected from the same subject.) Materials The Farwell MERMER System equipment
consisted of a computer equipped with two monitors and the appropriate graphics
and data acquisition/processing boards, a four-channel EEG amplifier system, a
custom electrode headband, and the necessary custom software for data
acquisition and analysis. (The Farwell
MERMER System is also referred to as the Farwell MERA System; see 9,18). Method One person in each pair (person A) was
interviewed about details of the personal history and life experiences of the
other (person B). Stimuli relevant to a
particular real-life event were developed from interview material. Prior to beginning the interviews and
testing, all individuals were advised of the procedures and reasons for this research,
each signing waiver forms. All subjects
knew the identity of the person who provided information about their life
experiences, and each granted permission for the information to be
provided. In each case, prior to the
test, the knowledgeable subject did not discuss the information to be detected
with the informer. On the day of the
testing, all subjects were instructed to behave as if they knew nothing of the
events investigated and to refrain from saying or doing anything that would
reveal any relevant knowledge they might have to the researchers. Nine Probe stimuli were developed that
were relevant to each specific real-life event in question. For example, if the event was a birthday
party celebration in a restaurant, the Probe stimuli might include the name of
the restaurant ("Bosco's"), the name of another person present
("Jim Jones"), the nature of the celebration ("birthday
party"), and an action that the subject engaged in ("lit
candles"). For each Probe stimulus, similar
Irrelevant stimuli were constructed that would be equally plausible for a
person who had no knowledge of the event.
For example, for the Probe "Bosco's," an Irrelevant could be
"Henry's." For the Probe
"Jim Jones," an Irrelevant could be "Bill Johnson." For the Probe "birthday party," an
Irrelevant could be "anniversary celebration." For the Probe "lit candles," an
Irrelevant could be "brought cake" (if the subject did not indeed
bring the cake). Each stimulus consisted of names, words,
or phrases of up to 20 characters presented on a computer screen under computer
control. Probes were stimuli relevant
to the subject and to the event in question.
Irrelevants were, as the name implies, irrelevant. For each Probe stimulus, there were four
Irrelevant stimuli. The stimuli were
structured such that the Probes and Irrelevants were indistinguishable for a
subject who was not knowledgeable about the event in question. In addition to the Probes and
Irrelevants, one-sixth of the stimuli were Targets, one for each Probe. The task instructions made Targets
recognizable and noteworthy for all subjects, whether or not they were
knowledgeable about the event in question.
Each subject was given a list of the Targets and told that he/she would
need to recognize and identify them during the test. Subjects were instructed to press a special button each time one
of the stimuli on the list of Targets appeared on the screen. Thus, the Targets were recognizable and
noteworthy for all subjects. The
Irrelevants were irrelevant for all subjects.
The Probes, being relevant to the investigated event, were recognizable
and noteworthy only for the subjects who had participated in the event. Overall, there were nine Probes, nine
Targets, and 36 Irrelevants for each event.
These were divided into three subsets, each subset containing three Probes,
three Targets, and 12 Irrelevants. Each
subset, then, contained a total of 18 stimuli. MERMER testing consists of a series of
stimulus presentations or "trials," each lasting three seconds. In each trial, one stimulus is flashed on
the screen, and the electrical brain response to that stimulus is
recorded. The trials are presented in
blocks, each block consisting of 72 trials.
That is, the subject views and responds to a series of 72 stimuli, then
pauses for a time, and then another series of 72 stimuli is presented, and so
on. Each block lasts about three and
one-half minutes. In each block, only one of the three
subsets of 18 stimuli is used. Each of
these stimuli is presented four times to reach the total of 72 trials for the
block. Each subject participated in
nine blocks of trials, three blocks using each of the three stimulus subsets. Trials with data contaminated by
artifacts generated by eye movements or other muscle-generated noise were
rejected on-line, and additional trials were presented so that the required
number of 72 artifact-free trials was obtained. The order of stimulus presentation was randomized within each
block. Prior to the test, each subject was asked
to study a list of the Targets, and was instructed that he/she would need to
recognize and identify these stimuli during the test. Before each test began, the researcher
read descriptions of the Probes and Targets to be presented, for example,
"Some of the items you will see are relevant to a particular person and a
particular event. One of the items is
the name of the restaurant where the event took place." As these items were described, the
experimenter asked the subject to repeat the descriptions. Once this process was completed, the
experimenter read the list of all stimulus items (the actual Probes, Targets,
and Irrelevants) that were presented.
This list of items was not presented again until the test was over. Descriptions of the Target and Probe
stimuli specific to each block, (but not
the actual stimuli) were repeated for the subject at the beginning of each of
the nine blocks to enhance the significance of the stimuli by establishing the
context in which they were presented.
For example, "In this block one of the stimuli you see will be the
name of a person who was present at the investigated event." Subjects were given a mouse for the
purpose of responding with a button press to each stimulus. Subjects were instructed to press the
left-hand button whenever a stimulus appeared that was on the list of Target
stimuli they had studied before the test.
For all other stimuli, subjects were instructed to press the right-hand
button. Thus, subjects pressed the
right-hand button for both Probes and Irrelevants, whether they recognized the
Probes or not. In terms of overt
behavior then, subjects concealed their knowledge of the Probes. The only indication of their knowledge of
the Probes was provided by their brain responses. By selecting an arbitrary set of stimuli
which subjects must discriminate (Targets), a task was created that focused the
subjects' attention in a manner that ensured the elicitation of the MERMER in
response to these Target stimuli. The designation
of arbitrary Targets made it possible to hide the items relevant to the
investigation (Probes) among the more frequently occurring stimuli
(Irrelevants), while assigning a task that ensured that the subjects had to
notice, process, and categorize all stimuli.
For the subjects who were not knowledgeable, these Probe items were
indistinguishable from the Irrelevants, because nothing in the procedure drew
the subjects' attention to these items.
For the knowledgeable subjects, the Probe items were noteworthy, because
they were associated with the information the subject possessed regarding the
event under investigation. The predictions were as follows: (a) the
Probes would elicit a MERMER for the knowledgeable subjects, who in each case
had participated in the event under investigation; and (b) the Probes would not
elicit a MERMER for the subjects who were not knowledgeable because they had
not participated in the event. Subject B from each pair was tested on
the stimulus set constructed from interview material relevant to Subject B’s
life. Subjects were presented with
visual stimuli with a duration of 300 msec at an inter-stimulus interval of
three seconds. In addition to Subject B
in each pair being tested on stimuli pertinent to him/her, Subject A from
another pair was tested on the same stimuli.
Thus, pair 1 Subject B was tested on information about him/herself
gathered from pair 1 Subject A. In
addition, pair 2 Subject A was tested on the same stimuli. Therefore, each set of stimuli was tested on
(1) a subject for whom the Probe stimuli were relevant, and (2) a subject for
whom the Probe stimuli were not relevant. All subjects were instructed not to
indicate knowledge of relevant information to the experimenter in any way,
including their button presses. This
essentially instructed knowledgeable subjects to conceal their knowledge during
the test. Brain responses were recorded from the
midline frontal, central, and parietal scalp locations, (Fz, Cz, and Pz
respectively) referenced to linked mastoids (behind the ear), and from a
location on the forehead to track eye movements. Scalp recording was done with disposable EEG electrodes, similar
to those used in standard EEG recording.
The electrodes were embedded in a special headband designed and
constructed by Dr. Farwell's Human Brain Research Laboratory (see 18,19). Data were digitally filtered using a
49-point optimal digital filter with a passband cutoff frequency of four Hz and
a stopband cutoff frequency of six Hz (22). At the end of each test, subjects were
given a written list of all stimulus items and asked to mark each item as
noteworthy, somewhat noteworthy, or irrelevant. If, for some reason, any of the intended Irrelevant stimuli were,
in fact, relevant for a subject for reasons unknown to the experimenter, they
could be eliminated from the data analysis.
This happened in two cases, yet the MERMER System was sufficiently
robust that both subjects were correctly classified, one with 99.9 percent
confidence and the other with 90.0 percent, even with these spurious Irrelevant
stimuli. One reason for this could be
that the average Irrelevant responses included 35 stimuli that were truly
irrelevant and only one that was not.
Thus the Irrelevant brain-response pattern dominated for the Irrelevant
stimuli in data analysis. In the present study, the experimental
procedure and data acquisition methodology were essentially the same as those
used in the previous four MERMER studies conducted by Farwell and his
colleagues (see 9, 16, 17, 18, 20, 21).
In addition to the MERA technique and the MERMER brain response, these
four studies introduced several innovations that may have contributed to the
higher level of accuracy achieved in these studies than in the original Farwell
and Donchin (5) study, and the other ERP studies. In data acquisition, the inter-stimulus
interval was extended beyond the approximately 1.5 seconds typical of previous
studies to 3 seconds, and the data analysis epoch was extended to 2.2 seconds
post-stimulus. This allowed the data
analysis to consider a previously unobserved, frontally prominent, electrically
negative subcomponent with a latency of up to 2 seconds post-stimulus (a
markedly longer latency than the P300 used in previous studies). This component, in addition to the P300, was
a major feature contributing to the signal analysis and statistical computation
resulting in the accurate determinations of information presence or
absence. In order to improve the
accuracy of data analysis and the detection of complex patterns in the
waveform, the digitizing rate was increased to 333 samples per second (100
samples per second was typical for previous studies). In Farwell and Donchin (4,5) and other
previous studies, the Targets were irrelevant to the investigated event, and
were made relevant to the subject only by the task instructions. In the present
study and the other four recent MERMER studies conducted by Farwell and his
colleagues (9,16,17,18,20,21), the Targets were relevant not only to the task
instructions, but also to the investigated event. This made the Target stimuli more similar to the Probe stimuli
for a knowledgeable subject, and may have, therefore, increased the similarity
of the Target and Probe responses, and improved the discrimination of the data
analysis for these subjects. (For a
subject who was not knowledgeable, this change made no difference since such a
subject does not recognize the event-relevant information.) As in previous research by Farwell and
his colleagues (9,16,17,18,19,20,21) the statistical technique of bootstrapping
was employed to compare the brain responses to the different types of
stimuli. This allowed a determination
of information present or information absent and provided a statistical
confidence for this determination for each individual case. Bootstrapping is a statistical method of
analysis that assesses, for each subject, the similarity between the Probe
brain response and those brain responses elicited by the Targets and the
Irrelevants respectively. This
technique provides an estimate of the sampling distribution of a parameter when
a limited number of samples are available.
This is done by obtaining many random subsamples from the available data
and recomputing the parameter for each subsample. The essential question regarding each
subject is, "Does the subject recognize the Probe stimuli as
significant?" In terms of brain
responses, the question is "Does the subject's brain response to the Probes
contain a MERMER?" For each
subject, the bootstrapping technique provides a level of statistical confidence
that the Probe brain responses are more similar to the Target brain responses
(which contain a MERMER) than to the Irrelevant brain responses (which do not
contain a MERMER), or, alternatively, that the Probe brain responses are more
similar to the Irrelevant brain responses than to the Target brain
responses. If the Probe responses are
more similar to the Targets (i.e., Probes, like Targets, elicit a MERMER), then
this indicates that Probe stimuli, like Targets, are recognized as significant
by the subject. In this case, the
determination is information present, i.e., the subject has information
relevant to the investigated situation stored in his brain. If the Probe responses are more similar to the
Irrelevant responses (i.e., Probes, like Irrelevants, do not elicit a MERMER),
then the determination is information absent, i.e., the subject does not have
the relevant information stored in his/her brain. The determinations made by the MERMER System
and presented here are binary, i.e., either information present or information
absent, and the statistical confidence levels presented here are stated as a
percent, e.g., 99.9 percent. Thus, if the MERMER System produces a
determination of information present with a statistical confidence of 99.9
percent, then mathematically there is a 99.9 percent probability that the Probe
brain response is more similar to the Target response than to the Irrelevant
response for this specific subject. The Farwell MERMER System applies this
data analysis algorithm automatically to produce for each subject a
determination of information present or information absent and a statistical
confidence for this determination. (For
a detailed discussion, see 8,9,16,19.)
This is a mathematical process, and does not depend on any subjective
judgments or interpretation of the data. Results The MERMER System data analysis algorithm
correctly classified all six subjects. All
three subjects who were tested on their own biographical data were correctly
classified as information present, and thus as having participated in the
investigated event, with a confidence level of 99.9 percent in each case. All three subjects who were not
knowledgeable were also correctly classified as information absent in the
brain, two with a confidence level of 99.9 percent and one with 90.0 percent
confidence. There were no false negatives, no false
positives, and no indeterminate outcomes. There are many different ways to present
MERMER brain response data visually.
Different methods illustrate different features of the data. No one method can adequately capture all of
the information incorporated in the data in a visually recognizable form. One method that is often effective in
providing a visual representation of the differences in brain responses
involves plotting average responses to Probe, Target, and Irrelevant stimuli as
voltage over time at a specific scalp location. Figures 1 and 2 present the average brain
responses to Probe, Target, and Irrelevant stimuli for two of the
subjects. Figure 1 presents data for a
subject who is knowledgeable regarding the investigated event. Figure 2 presents data for a subject who is
not knowledgeable regarding the investigated event. These figures present plots of voltage
over time at the parietal (Pz) scalp location.
In these figures, the MERMER appears as a positive voltage peak at
approximately 500 msec followed by a negative voltage deflection maximal at
approximately 1200 - 1500 msec. (The
latency of these deflections varies according to the speed of the individual
subjects' brain processing.) The brain responses of two subjects whose
data are presented here are typical of their respective groups, knowledgeable
and not knowledgeable. As can be
clearly seen in the figures, for the knowledgeable subjects (Figure 1) the
MERMER is elicited in response to both Targets and Probes. For the subjects who were not knowledgeable
(Figure 2), the MERMER is elicited only in response to Targets. Although
there are recognizable common features, there are also individual differences
among subjects in the pattern of brain responses. These individual differences are accounted for in the
bootstrapping data analysis algorithm, which makes individual within-subject
comparisons of brain responses to the three types of stimuli. The statistical analysis yielded a correct
determination with a high level of statistical confidence in every case. This is an important feature of the MERMER
System - it does not depend on subjective evaluation, interpretation, or
scoring of the data. Discussion Three pairs of subjects were tested to
determine if brain MERMER testing implemented by the Farwell MERMER System
could detect concealed information regarding real-life events stored in the
brain. In each pair, Subject A was
interviewed about a salient event in Subject B’s life and the people, places,
things, and actions involved in the event.
Stimuli were developed from interview material, and Irrelevant stimuli
were added that would be equally plausible to someone who had not participated
in the event in question and did not know the details about it. For subjects who were not knowledgeable,
this was a simple and ordinary classification task. These subjects recognized only two types of stimuli: a) Targets, which were noteworthy due to
task instructions and also relatively rare, and b) irrelevant stimuli
(consisting in fact of true Irrelevants, plus Probes -- which they did not
distinguish as being different from the Irrelevants). Previous research (9,16,17,18,19,20,21) has shown that processing
by the brain of noteworthy events results in the elicitation of a MERMER in the
brain response. Thus, the Targets
elicited a MERMER and the Irrelevants did not.
For subjects who were not knowledgeable, the (unrecognized) Probes also
did not elicit a MERMER. Knowledgeable subjects, however,
recognized a second noteworthy and relatively rare type of stimuli, namely the
Probes, which were relevant to them.
Thus, for knowledgeable subjects the Probes, too, elicited a MERMER. The present study’s experimental design
served to create a two-category series for an individual who was not
knowledgeable, and a three-category series (with the same stimuli) for an
individual who was knowledgeable. For a
subject who was not knowledgeable, one category (Targets) was noteworthy. For a knowledgeable subject, two categories
(Targets and Probes) were noteworthy.
The Targets provided a template for a response to the stimuli known to
be noteworthy -- MERMER-producing stimuli.
The Irrelevants provided a template for a response to stimuli that are
not noteworthy -- non-MERMER-producing stimuli. The determination of information present
or information absent in the brain consisted of comparing the Probe responses
to (a) the Target responses, which contained a MERMER; and (b) the Irrelevant
responses, which did not contain a MERMER.
Probe responses similar to Target responses, i.e., containing a MERMER,
indicated that the subject recognized the Probes and, therefore, the
determination was information present, i.e., the subject was
knowledgeable. Brain responses to the Probes
which were similar to those of the Irrelevants, i.e., lacking a MERMER,
indicated that the subject did not recognize the Probes and, therefore, the
determination was information absent, i.e., the subject was not knowledgeable. Note that knowledgeable and not
knowledgeable refer to the true state of the subject, and information present
and information absent refer to the determinations by the Farwell MERMER
System. (Information present and
information absent are also referred to respectively as "match” and
"no match," indicating whether or not there is a match between
information from the crime scene and information stored in the brain.) In this experiment, as in all previous ones
using this system, the determinations matched the true subject state in every
case. That is, brain MERMER testing was
100 percent accurate. Future
Perspectives The brain is centrally involved in every
human action and records everything that human beings do, including criminal
acts. Perhaps the only reason that the
brain has not yet become central to criminal investigations is that in the past
there has been no scientific, objective way to connect the record stored in the
brain with evidence from the crime.
While some crimes may not have sufficient physical evidence, the brain
is always there, storing a record of the actions and even the thoughts involved
in the crime. This paper reports some
of the first practical steps of progress towards utilizing the brain as a
source of evidence in criminal investigations. If future research supports the viability
of using brain MERMER testing as an investigative aid, it will have some
features in common with fingerprinting and DNA. All three are scientific techniques which could be used to link
evidence associated with a crime to the perpetrator of the crime. Because of this, brain MERMER testing is
sometimes referred to as "Brain Fingerprinting." There are, however, differences between
MERMER and these other technologies.
One difference is in the type of evidence. Fingerprinting matches prints left at the crime scene with the
patterns on the fingers; DNA connects biological samples from the crime scene
with the DNA of the perpetrator; and brain MERMER testing could link
crime-related information with information stored in the brain of the
perpetrator. Another difference between brain MERMER
testing on the one hand, and DNA and fingerprints on the other, is that DNA and
fingerprints detect something that is unique to the individual, and MERMER
detects information that may be possessed by more than one individual (for
example, when there are several perpetrators of a crime). If brain MERMER testing does become
widely available and successful in the field, what will be the implications for
criminal investigative procedures and training? Certainly, the brain MERMER testing procedure itself must be
performed by a properly trained expert.
In addition, like fingerprinting, DNA, and all other breakthroughs in
investigation, the advent of brain MERMER testing will necessitate changes in
the way crimes are investigated and will require investigators to learn new
skills. Investigators who apply the
MERMER technique will need to collect and preserve the specific kind of
evidence demanded by the technique.
This means that investigations must include, from the beginning, an
expert trained to recognize and collect information from crime scenes
specifically suited to identifying the perpetrator through brain MERMERs. This is probably the greatest challenge to
the success of brain MERMER testing in the field. When and if MERMER testing becomes a
widely practiced technique, it could have significant implications for how,
when, and whether cases are solved, and for the treatment of suspects. The goal of forensic science is not only to
identify perpetrators correctly, but also to exonerate innocent suspects
accurately, and to do so as quickly as possible and with a minimum of trauma
and invasive procedures. From a human
rights perspective, minimizing the time and trauma of investigative procedures
is important in every case, and particularly important in the case of innocent
individuals. How does MERMER testing address these
concerns? What MERMER testing may
contribute in the case of an innocent suspect is an opportunity to prove
his/her innocence early in the investigative process, thereby minimizing trauma
and expense and avoiding possible negative outcomes such as invasive
procedures, false conviction, and punishment.
For an innocent suspect, the MERMER test consists of simply viewing
words or pictures on a screen and pushing buttons in accord with the task
instructions. The innocent suspect does
not even know which items are relevant to the crime. The suspect does not answer any questions, make any statements, offer
any testimony, hear any accusations, or submit to any invasive procedures. In the case of a guilty suspect, what
MERMER testing may contribute is an efficient means to correctly identify the
perpetrator early in the investigative process, even when there is little or no
physical or testimonial evidence. The
fact that the technique is non-invasive and non-testimonial serves to increase
its potential applicability for any suspect, whether guilty or innocent. Brain MERMER testing is not an alternative
to or substitute for fingerprinting, DNA, or other traditional investigative
processes. It has almost nothing in
common with "lie detection" or
polygraphy. Polygraphy is a technique
of interrogation and detection of deception.
The interrogator asks questions and uses the polygraphy in an attempt to
determine whether or not the suspect is lying, and to elicit a confession
during the interrogation. In contrast, MERMER testing is not a
technique for interrogation or for the detection of deception. Brain MERMER testing does not require any
questions of or any answers from the suspect.
The subject neither lies nor tells the truth during the procedure, and
in fact the results of MERMER testing are exactly the same whether the subject
lies or tells the truth at any time.
MERMER testing determines objectively whether or not certain information
is stored in the brain, regardless of any false or truthful statements the
subject may or may not make about it. Like other scientific investigative techniques,
brain MERMER testing is compatible with and complementary to all other viable
technologies for solving crimes.
Information and evidence obtained through several different technologies
often provide a more complete and accurate picture than any one technology
alone can provide. MERMER testing has some physical
requirements. During the testing
itself, subjects must sit and view the screen in order for the data to be
collected. Artifacts caused by
occasional or minor movements can be eliminated in data analysis, but the
subject must sit and refrain from major movements of the body for data
collection to be possible. Will brain MERMER testing potentially
solve every case? No. Fingerprinting and DNA can determine
scientifically whether or not a person was present at the crime scene in the
small number of cases where fingerprints or DNA are available. Brain MERMER testing offers the promise of
the same capability, even in cases where no physical evidence is
available. As with every forensic
science technology, however, there are limitations to the MERMER technology and
cases where it is not applicable. MERMER detects the presence or absence of
information, not guilt or innocence per se.
In some cases, a person may possess virtually all of the available
information about a crime even
though he/she is not a perpetrator. For
example, in the course of interrogation investigators may make the mistake of
revealing to a suspect information that they know about a crime before the
MERMER test has been applied. In such
cases, possessing crime-relevant information does not identify an individual as
the perpetrator and, therefore, MERMER cannot be applied to solving the case. In this context, it is important that
investigators take effective precautions to protect insofar as possible against
revealing to the suspect the known details of a case before the MERMER test is
run. Investigators may want to keep
accurate records (e.g., tape recordings) of interactions with the suspect where
relevant information may be exchanged. MERMER would not be applicable in a case
in which two suspects in an investigation were both present at a crime, but one
was a witness and one was a perpetrator.
MERMER can only detect information that places both at the scene of the
crime; it cannot determine what their roles were there. (This is like a situation in which there are
two sets of fingerprints at a crime scene.)
The technique can narrow the field of suspects to two, but cannot
definitively identify one of these as the perpetrator and exonerate the
other. Note, however, that this would
not result in a false positive outcome for the test, i.e., a correct
information present determination would be compatible with a suspect's story
that he was a witness. Crime-relevant
information possessed by the subject for legitimate reasons is a limitation on
the applicability, not on the accuracy, of the technique. MERMER would not be definitive in a case
in which investigators do not know sufficient information about a crime to be
able to test a suspect for crime-relevant information stored in the
brain. For example, authorities may
suspect that someone has been stealing cash from a retail outlet, but may not
know how much was taken, when, where, or how the crime took place. How often such cases will occur in the field
is an empirical question that can only be answered by applying MERMER
extensively in the field using properly trained personnel and investigative
procedures designed to facilitate this new technique. How many cases brain MERMER testing can
solve overall, and what will be the range of application of the technique in
solving crimes, remains, at this point, an empirical question that can only be
answered by widespread application of the technique in the field. The opportunity to access the vast
potential of the human brain as a storehouse of evidence; the promise that
brain MERMER testing may be able to solve a wide variety of cases that now
remain unsolved; the potential to solve cases more quickly, accurately, and
effectively; and the opportunity to provide innocent suspects with a
non-invasive, non-stressful, and reliable means to exonerate themselves call
for extensive future research, both in the laboratory and in the field. Conclusion It
would be inappropriate to generalize the results of the present research
because of the small sample of subjects.
The 100-percent accuracy and high confidence level of the results,
however, provide further support for results from previous research using brain
MERMER testing. The research reported
here adds to the body of knowledge by accurately determining both the presence
and absence of specific information relevant to real-life events in the lives
of subjects, despite subjects' efforts to conceal that knowledge. The usefulness of brain MERMER testing
for law enforcement in detecting concealed knowledge should be explored
further. One possibility for future
studies would be to use as subjects incarcerated criminals who have exhausted
their appeals and/or have confessed. In
these cases there is an actual crime, and ground truth is known with a high
level of certainty. With appropriate
permission and observing all legal and ethical considerations, case files of
these inmates could be reviewed to determine pertinent crime details that were
available during the investigation.
Stimulus sets of Targets, Probes, and Irrelevants could then be
constructed and brain MERMER testing administered to determine whether or not
the subject's brain responses indicate knowledge of known pertinent crime
information. The same stimulus sets
could be tested on subjects who have no knowledge of the specific crime. This would provide a test of the ability of
brain MERMER testing to identify the perpetrator of an actual crime, using
information actually available in the investigation of the crime. Additional studies could explore the
reliability of using auditory and pictorial, as well as visual linguistic
material as Probe, Target, and Irrelevant stimuli. Further studies using brain MERMER testing to detect real-life
events under varying circumstances would also be valuable. Determining responsibility for criminal
acts is often a difficult challenge for investigators. Today’s sophisticated crime scene analysis
techniques can sometimes place the perpetrator at the scene of the crime;
however, physical evidence is not always present. Without other aids, such as eyewitness testimony or a confession,
investigators may develop a suspect, but have no way to confirm their
suspicions. Knowledge of numerous details of the
crime, such as the murder weapon, the specific position of the body, the amount
of money stolen -- any information not available to the public -- may reveal
that a particular individual is associated with the crime. Additional research is required to determine
if brain MERMER testing is a technique which could tell an investigator that a
particular person possesses this detailed knowledge. Additionally, if research determines that brain MERMER testing is
reliable enough that it could be introduced as evidence in court, it may be the
criminal investigative tool of the future. References 1. Gaillard AKW, Ritter W. Tutorials in event-related potential research: endogenous components. Amsterdam: North-Holland, 1983. 2. Picton TW. Handbook of electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology: human event-related potentials. Amsterdam: Elsevier, Vol. 3, 1988. 3. Druckman D, Lacey JI. Brain and cognition:
some new technologies. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press, 1989. 4. Farwell LA, Donchin E. The brain detector:
P300 in the detection of deception. Psychophysiology 1986; 24:434. 5. Farwell LA, Donchin E. The truth will out:
interrogative polygraphy ("lie detection") with event-related brain
potentials. Psychophysiology 1991;28:531-541. 6. Bashore T, Rapp P. Are there alternatives
to traditional polygraph procedures? Psychological Bulletin 1993;113:3-22. 7. Farwell LA, Donchin E. The truth will out:
interrogative polygraphy with event-related brain potentials. Psychophysiology
1988;25:445. 8. Wasserman S, Bockenholt U. Bootstrapping:
applications to psychophysiology. Psychophysiology 1989;26:208-221. 9. Farwell LA, inventor. Method and apparatus
for multifaceted electroencephalographic response analysis (MERA). US patent
5,363,858. 1994 Nov 15. 10. Rosenfeld JP, Nasman VT, Whalen I, Cantwell
B, Mazzeri L. Late vertex positivity in event-related potentials as a guilty knowledge
indicator: a new method of lie detection. International Journal of Neuroscience
1987; 34:125-129. 11. Rosenfeld JP, Cantwell B, Nasman VT, Wojdak V, Ivanov S, Mazzeri L. A modified, event-related potential based guilty knowledge test. International Journal of Neuroscience 1988; 42:156-161. 12. Rosenfeld JP, Angell A, Johnson M, Quan J. An ERP-based, control-question lie detector analog: algorithms for discriminating effects within individual's average waveforms. Psychophysiology 1991;28(3):319-335. 13. Johnson MM, Rosenfeld JP. Oddball-evoked
P300-based method of deception detection in the laboratory II: utilization of
non- selective activation of
relevant knowledge. International Journal
of Psychophysiology 1992;12:289-306. 14. Allen JJB, Iacono WG. A comparison of
methods for the analysis of event-related potentials in deception detection.
Psychophysiology 1997;34:234-240. 15. Allen JJB, Iacono WG, Danielson KD. The
identification of concealed memories using the event-related potential and
implicit behavioral measures: a methodology for prediction in the face of individual differences.
Psychophysiology 1992;29:504-522. 16. Farwell LA. The brain-wave information
detection (BID) system: a new paradigm for psychophysiological detection of
information [unpublished doctoral dissertation]. Urbana-Champaign (IL):
University of Illinois, 1992. 17. Farwell LA. Two new twists on the truth
detector: brain-wave detection of occupational information. Psychophysiology
1992;29(4A):S3. 18. Farwell LA. Brain MERMERs: detection of FBI
Agents and crime-relevant information with the Farwell MERA system. Proceedings
of the International Security Systems Symposium; 1993; Washington, D.C. 19. Farwell LA, inventor. Method and apparatus
for truth detection. US patent 5,406,956. 1995 Apr 18. 20. Farwell LA, inventor. Method for
electroencephalographic information detection. US patent 5,467,777. 1995 Nov
21. 21. Farwell LA, Hernandez R. Brain-wave
detection of concealed information. Office of Research and Development of the
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA); 1993. 22. Farwell LA, Martinerie JM, Bashore TB, Rapp PE, Goddard P. Optimal digital filters for long latency event-related brain potentials. Psychophysiology 1993;30:405-412.
Information Present Brain Response
Information Absent Brain Response
Figure 2. Average brain response of Subject 6 at Pz
(parietal) scalp site in response to Target, Probe, and Irrelevant stimuli. |