Professor J. Peter Rosenfeld
The KurzweilAI article Reading Terrorists’ Minds About Imminent Attack said
Using P300 brain-wave testing in a mock terrorism scenario in which make-believe “persons of interest” were planning a crime, Northwestern University researchers were able to detect guilty knowledge with 100 percent accuracy with no false positives, J. Peter Rosenfeld, Northwestern professor of psychology reports. “Even when the researchers had no advance details about mock terrorism plans, the technology was still accurate in identifying 10 out of 12 terrorists and 20 out of 30 crime-related details,” Rosenfeld said. “The test was 83 percent accurate in predicting concealed knowledge, suggesting that our complex protocol could identify future terrorist activity.”
This means law enforcement officials may ultimately be able to confirm details about an attack (such as date, location, and weapon) that emerge from terrorist chatter by using P300 brain-wave testing with suspects.
J. Peter Rosenfeld, Ph.D. is
Professor of Psychology, and member of the interdepartmental
Neuroscience Program, Northwestern University. He is a leading scientist
in the pursuit of electroencephalogram-based lie detection.
Among the professional society positions he has held, Peter
served on the board of directors for the Association for Applied
Psychophysiology and as president of the Association for Applied
Psychophysiology. Among his editorial roles, he served as
associate editor of the International Journal of
Psychophysiology and as
associate editor of the Journal of Neurotherapy. He served as
member
of
the
editorial board for the following journals: Biofeedback and
Self-Regulation, International Journal of Rehabilitation and
Health,
Journal of Credibility Assessment and Witness Psychology, and Applied
Psychophysiology. He has published more than 150 articles and other
professional research materials, and has presented his work nationally
and internationally.
There are three major questions being currently researched in his
laboratory:
1) Is it possible to develop a
P300-based deception detection test
which is accurate and resistant to countermeasures?
2) Does the profile or pattern of event-related brain wave (ERP)
amplitudes across the scalp vary from deceptive to honest mind states?
He mostly looks at the P300 ERP in response to autobiographical
information. There is an obvious application here to the field of
detection of deception, but there are other more theoretical concerns:
Is there a profile specific to deception (a “Pinocchio” effect)? Does
the brain work in a unique way during deception? Does altruistic
deception show a different P300 profile than selfish deception? Do the
brains of psychopaths produce different P300 profiles than the brains of
normals during deception? As far as P300 is concerned, we don’t see
differences. He has recently seen that there is a difference in normals
between the late slow wave responses accompanying lies versus truths,
but we do not see this effect in people with psychopathic
traits.
3) What is the difference in brain function during retrieval of a) real
memories vs. b) honestly believed, but false memories vs. c) malingered
false memories (which the subject knows are not real, but dishonestly
claims are real)? This question is addressed also by comparing P300
scalp profiles associated with the three kinds of memories. He also
looks
at the latency of the P300 wave (time from stimulus to wave peak) and
have so far found it is the best discriminator of a) and b) above. This
suggests that P300 latency is a correlate of unconscious recognition.
Peter edited
Detecting Concealed Information and Deception: Recent Developments.
He also coauthored
The Complex Trial Protocol (CTP): A new,
countermeasure-resistant, accurate, P300-based method
for detection of concealed information,
False Memory: P300 Amplitude, Topography, and Latency,
Scaled P300 Scalp Distribution Correlates of
Deception in an Autobiographical Oddball Paradigm, and
Simple, Effective Countermeasures to P300-based Tests of Detection of
Concealed Information, and authored
“Brain Fingerprinting:” A Critical Analysis and
Event-related Potentials in Detection of Deception.
Read the
full list of his publications!
Peter earned his B.A. in Biology and the Humanities at Columbia College
in 1959. He earned his M.A. in English and Comparative Literature at
Columbia University in 1961 and his second M.A. in Psychology at the
University of Iowa in 1969. He earned his Ph.D. in Physiological
Psychology at the University of Iowa in 1971.
Read
Mind Readers: Brain-scanning Machines May Soon Be Capable of
Discerning Rudimentary Thoughts and Separating Fact From
Fiction.