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 1. Analysis

May 21, 2012


WEAPONS OF PERCEPTION: NEUROSCIENCE AND MIND-CONTROLLED WEAPONS

Advances in neuroscience offer the military the potential of mind-controlled
weapons and performance enhancement. Are mind-controlled weapons and
extra-sensory enhanced warfare techniques mere science fiction? Recent
developments in neuroscience suggest not, with a new Royal Society report
claiming that research in areas such as neuropharmacology, functional
neuroimaging and neural interface systems could create a new breed of super
soldier and diminish enemy ability.

By Berenice Baker

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Neuroscience is one of the most rapidly advancing fields in medicine, with
highly-detailed imaging offering new insights into the way the brain works and
direct brain interfaces enabling weapons to be targeted and fired with just a
thought. The technology is not speculative – just last week scientists unveiled
an implant called BrainGate that enabled a woman who had lost the use of her
limbs after a devastating stroke to control a robot arm using thought processes
alone.


NEUROSCIENCE, CONFLICT AND SECURITY

The new report, "Neuroscience, Conflict and Security", formed part of a series
that examined the impact of neuroscience on society, dealing specifically with
the potential application of advances in neuroscience to the armed forces and
security personnel.

It was chaired by Prof Rod Flower FRS, professor of biochemical pharmacology at
the William Harvey Research Institute, Queen Mary University of London, and
brought together international experts to discuss new developments in the field
and the laws and ethics that apply to their application in a military and civil
context. According to Flower, it was the first time the Ministry of Defence’s
(MoD) Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (Dstl) had worked with academia
in neuroscience.


"A key advance in neuroscience has been improvements in real-time neuro-imaging,
which can indicate in great detail which parts of the brain ‘light up’ when
undertaking certain activities."

"The people we were in contact with there were the horizon scanning team whose
job it is to look out for potential new applications of research," Flower said.
"We relied on what was publicly available, and while the US is extremely open
about what its military does, the UK is not so open, and countries like Russia
and China are a complete cipher."

A key advance in neuroscience has been improvements in real-time neuro-imaging,
which can indicate in great detail which parts of the brain "light up" when
undertaking certain activities. One of its applications could be to screen
potential recruits for a specific role, for example to see if they are
temperamentally suited to be a commander, pilot or diver.



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"At the moment it’s very much a case of taking people on and subjecting them to
high-stress exercises and choosing the ones who make it," says Flower. "If they
could be subjected to imaging during assessment you could identify who has good
risk-taking behaviour, strategy and planning ability, or 3D analytical skills."


BRAIN SCANNING FOR TARGET IDENTIFICATION

Brain scanning could also speed up and improve target recognition or identify
changes in surveillance satellite images by recognising subconscious objective
identification rather than an operator having to process and actively react.

"It has been discovered that when you show the brain different images, it spots
the differences between them even though they may not reach conscious
awareness," says Flower. "Wearing a helmet like a hairnet can pick up a spike in
brain activity which you can correlate to differences identified between two
images, even if they were flashed up too quickly to process consciously."



That potentially has the ability not only to speed up the process of target
selection but also improve accuracy. It could also reduce problems associated
with fatigue, which is a big issue facing people whose job involves scanning
images for a long time, especially in the dark, such as surveillance UAV
operators.


MIND CONTROLLED WEAPONS AND AIRCRAFT

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


RELATED FEATURE

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SOLUTIONS FOR SITUATIONAL AWARENESS – BATTLEFIELD INNOVATIONS

Situational awareness solutions allow soldiers to make effective use of varied
information in a battlefield context.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Technologies such as the BrainGate implant have already shown that machinery can
be controlled with the mind alone, and games manufacturers have already brought
out low-cost helmet controllers than enable wearers to play by mind power alone.
The obvious application for the military is mind-controlled weaponry and
remotely-piloted aircraft, which could make operation and reactions far faster.

"If you couple that with your subconscious mind being much faster at dealing
with information you can see a situation sometime in the future where you’re not
thinking about flying the aircraft, but your subconscious is doing it without
interfering in any way," says Flower. "You would probably have a much better
appreciation of an incoming threat and fire off a couple of missiles without
having to consciously think."


DRUGS TO STIMULATE TROOPS AND DISABLE ENEMIES

The report also examines evidence that certain drugs can improve the performance
of personnel performing certain military tasks. Among these, drugs developed to
relieve the symptoms of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) in
children, such as Ritalin, have shown great promise on unaffected adults who
want to focus their attention on a specific task.

"It could help when flying a long mission where you may become fatigued and your
attention begins to drift off," says Flower. "It could also help you focus when
you have a lot of information to process, like being a fighter pilot in a
particularly tense situation when you’re trying to get a missile lock on a
target while the aircraft and radio are bombarding you with information and you
have to communicate back."

Another approach that could improve the way the brain works is known as
trans-cranial electrical stimulation where electrodes attached to a 9V battery
are clamped to the head. Control studies showed it can improve the rate at which
things are learnt, and possibly result in better memory formation.

"One controversial subject the report touches on is that of
neuropsychology-inspired chemical weapons."

One controversial subject the report touches on is that of
neuropsychology-inspired chemical weapons, discussing the fact that although the
international Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) bans the use of chemical weapons
on the battlefield, they are allowed for civil law-enforcement purposes.

"One of the problems is as far as anyone in our field can find, it’s not
possible to find a totally safe drug that you could use," says Flower, citing
the example of the Moscow theatre siege in which 150 civilians died alongside
their Chechen rebel captors.

"It’s partly because everyone’s unique and responds in different ways. If you
start spraying it around you may affect children, women, men, pregnant women,
old men, people taking other drugs, and people with heart disease. It won’t just
be the 70kg healthy young men on which these drugs are tested."

Flower is also keen to bust some myths about some chemicals that were reportedly
tested for their effects on enemy troops.

"Oxytocin is a hormone that’s produced in pregnancy that produces a feeling of
emotional closeness and trust," says Flower. "There was a lot of talk that you
may be able to use this as an interrogation tool to make your captive trust you
and tell you all his secrets. But as far as we can tell that’s all nonsense."


THE ETHICS OF NEURAL WAR

Like automated weaponry and battlefield robotics, however, these new techniques
could require an overhaul of ethical guidelines, especially with regards to
civilian casualties. Currently the last person who gave the order to fire is
responsible, but if it came from the operator’s subconscious, the line becomes
blurred.

With advances in neuroscience holding such great potential for military
applications, Flower would like to see the MoD to work closer with academia. One
approach would be to have a two-way intern exchange between the MoD and
academia.

"It’s not rocket science, the research is all out there, and most of it gets
published," says Flower. "It’s just a question of them being aware of it and
able to pick up the ideas and exploit them before they read about it in Nature."





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