TIME Magazine
TIME 100: The
Next Wave - The Brain
Scientist

TIME Magazine has Selected Dr.
Lawrence Farwell to the
TIME 100: The Next Wave,
the 100 top Innovators who may
be "the Picassos or Einsteins of
the 21st century."
Climbing
Inside The Criminal Mind
By Sarah Sturman Dale
Lawrence Farwell
His work is controversial,
to say the least. But Farwell
says his "brain fingerprint"
technology can
tell cops what a suspect really
knows -- and doesn't
know.
The kung
ful expert is backed by
cash from the CIA.
He went to Harvard, works in
Iowa and loves swing dancing. That's not
the typical profile of an anticrime
crusader, but Lawrence Farwell is an
unusual guy.
While
developing technology that would allow the
vocally paralyzed to speak, he stumbled
across a trove of seemingly extraneous
signals stored in the brain. He began
looking for a way to put that information
to use. Result: a new forensic technology
he calls brain fingerprinting.
Here's how it
works: Farwell fits a suspect with a
sensor-filled headband. By flashing a
series of pictures on a screen, he can
read the subject's involuntary reactions
to them. When there's something familiar
about an image, it triggers an electrical
response that begins between 300 and 800
milliseconds after the stimulus.
Scientists
have studied these "p300 bumps" for years.
Farwell believes that, combined with other
measures--he has patented which ones he
looks at--he can determine if a subject is
familiar with anything from a phone number
to an al-Qaeda code word.
Indeed, the
CIA has funded his research with more than
$1 million, and a former FBI point man for
biological and chemical weapons has joined
Farwell's firm. Critics say that p300-type
testing needs a lot of refinement before
it's a perfect polygraph, but such
criticism doesn't deter Farwell.
"The
fundamental task in law enforcement and
espionage and counterespionage is to
determine the truth," he says. "My
philosophy is that there is a tremendous
cost in failing to apply the technology."
In Search of Revolutionaries
Every
self-respecting person
these days wants to be an innovator
("Hey, that was my idea!"), but it's the rare one who will
really change the world in some
way. Innovators have to be singularly bold and defiant for their ideas to survive the
not-innovated-here
syndrome. You will
find that kind
of passion among
the 100 people
we plan
to profile in
a new 18-part
monthly series
called
Innovators
that begins in
this
issue.
Subtitled "TIME
100: The
Next Wave," it
carries
forward the
series in which
we profiled
the 100
leaders of the
20th century,
but this time
we will focus
on people whose
ideas are just
beginning to
be recognized
as
revolutionary.
Are these the
Picassos or
Einsteins
of the
21st century?
Let the debate
begin...
Making the
World Safer
For
nations at war, technology
has always been an unsteady
ally. Yes, the Great Wall kept China's marauders at bay,
but all the weaponry American
brought to bear on the Vietnamese --
from napalm to the B-52s--couldn't win their hearts and
minds. In our present war,
we will rely more than ever on
technology: the clever missiles
that target a terrorist leader;
the vaccines that protect against
biological weapons; the lines of
code that render a computer
impervious to cyberterrorists. As the
public debates whether it's safe
to fly again, high-tech
innovations promise to do
everything from positively identifying
passengers at the gate to
automatically returning hijacked planes safely to
earth.
The
men and women who dreamed up
these techlological wonders
probably never imagined that
civilizatgion would
someday rely so heavily on
thier in genuity, but
heroies rarely become so b y
their design. There is no
guarantee, of course, that
their creations will be
used wiedley or
well. At Boston's
Logan Airport, where the
planes thaat hit the World
Trade Center began their
flight, the security codes
to Jetway doors were often
scribbled in pencil next
to the locks. Technology can
always be
undone by human error.
So, give us the gizmos,
but grant us
the wisdom to
know science
alone will
never make us
perfectly
secure. . --
By
Matthew Cooper
Links
Video on CNN -- Dr.
Larry Farwell -- TIME Top
Innovators
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