Is Netflix’s Black Mirror Becoming a Reality?
By Jeffrey Yang
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Image courtesy to National Institute of Health, NIH Image Gallery, Flickr |
I was both fascinated and frightened by Brain Fingerprinting technology. On one hand, I had no idea preliminary technology had been developed to depict correlations in someone’s recollection of a word and whether they were lying given a stimulus. On the other, I was frightened by the implications this may have in our criminal justice system. As Drs. Wilson and Snelling pointed out, what does this mean for our 5th amendment right against self-incrimination if undergoing Brain Fingerprinting becomes required by the state? Relating to the Black Mirror episode on Brain Fingerprinting, what if you committed murder at an earlier date and implicated yourself for crime B (which involved a murder in a similar fashion) that you didn’t commit but are currently a suspect for? This brought me back to Dr. Darby’s lecture on dementia and neuroimaging. What if the suspect subject to Brain Fingerprinting had dementia and believed they saw something that wasn’t there? What are the ethical and legal implications of a circumstance such as that?
First, let’s provide some background on Wilson and Snelling’s Brain Fingerprinting technology. It’s actually an electroencephalography (EEG) cap that participants wear while they are presented with a battery of words. The test utilizes the p300 neural signal to see if specific words trigger a brain response. There is a difference in the results when a participant is surprised because a word is significant to them versus when the word is not significant to them (Wilson and Snelling, unpublished).
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Image courtesy to Simon Fraser University - UniversityCommunication, Flickr |
Meanwhile, Drs. Wilson and Snelling acknowledged potential drawbacks to the test and said that as of right now, the EEG p300 signal test is only used as supplementary material in court for people who have “healthy” brain activity (Wilson & Snelling, 2018). Dr. Snelling stated, “it is simply uncertain what effect dementia would have on memory and recognition in the context of brain fingerprinting” and that “[dementia, drugs, and mental illness] are limits of what is still considered to be an experimental technology.” (Snelling, 2018). A future experiment they have planned is to test people suffering from dementia to see if this test would yield results similar to their initial findings (Wilson & Snelling, 2018). Addressing my Black Mirror question, they assured me that as the test relies on EEG responses to questions, the questions will be specific enough to the crime scene to not yield a false positive (Wilson & Snelling, 2018).
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Image courtesy to Pixabay |
Over the course of my study abroad trip, this conference was one of the things I was most excited for. The ethical concerns brought up from these lectures really challenged my own viewpoints on certain innovations. This was an experience that really opened my eyes and was particularly educational. I would like to thank Dr. Karen Rommelfanger and the Neuroethics Network Conference for allowing me and the students of Emory University the opportunity to participate in this conference.
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Jeffrey is a junior at Emory University pursuing a B.S. in Neuroscience and Behavioral Biology. His current research focuses on neural mechanisms of motivation and effort-based decision making. He is interested in enhancing scientific literacy, cancer metastasis, teaching, and hopes to attend medical school in the future pursuing an MD/PhD.
References
Darby, Ryan. 2018. Personal communication.
Höller, Y., Uhl, A., Bathke, A., Thomschewski, A., Butz, K., Nardone, R., … Trinka, E. (2017). Reliability of EEG Measures of Interaction: A Paradigm Shift Is Needed to Fight the Reproducibility Crisis. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 11. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2017.00441
Rosenfeld, J. P. (2005). "Brain fingerprinting: A critical analysis" (PDF). Scientific Review of Mental Health Practice. 4 (1): 20–37.
Rothstein, M. A. & Carnahan, S. (2001). Legal and policy issues in expanding the scope of law enforcement dna data banks. Brooklyn Law Review 67(1), 127-178.
Snelling, Jeanne. 2018. Personal Commutation.
Strasser, M. R. (2008, August 5). Fifth Amendment. Retrieved June 26, 2018, from https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/fifth_amendment
Wilson, Debra & Snelling, Jeanne. 2018. Personal Commutation.
Want to cite this post?
Yang, J. (2018). Is Netflix’s Black Mirror Becoming a Reality? The Neuroethics Blog. Retrieved on , from http://www.theneuroethicsblog.com/2018/12/is-netflixs-black-mirror-becoming.html