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Lying Makes Brain Work Harder

14:52 PM Nov, 29, 2004 EST

Brain scans show that the brains of people who are lying look very different from those of people who are telling the truth, U.S.
researchers said on Monday.

The study, using functional magnetic resonance imaging, or fMRI, not only sheds light on what goes on when people lie but may also
provide new technology for lie detecting, the researchers said.

"There may be unique areas in the brain involved in deception that can be measured with fMRI," said Dr. Scott Faro, director of the
Functional Brain Imaging Center at Temple University School of Medicine in Philadelphia.

"There may be unique areas in the brain involved in truth telling," Faro added at a news conference.

Faro and colleagues tested 10 volunteers. Six of them were asked to shoot a toy gun and then lie and say they didn't do it. Three others
who watched told the truth about what happened. One volunteer dropped out of the study.

While giving their "testimony," the volunteers were hooked up to a conventional polygraph and also had their brain activity imaged using
fMRI, which uses a strong magnet to provide a real-time picture of brain activity.

There were clear differences between the liars and the truth tellers, Faro's team told a meeting in Chicago of the Radiological Society of
North America.

"We found a total of seven areas of activation in the deception (group)," he said. "We found four areas of activity in the truth-telling arm."

Overall, it seemed to take more brain effort to tell the lie than to tell the truth, Faro found.

Lying caused activity in the frontal part of the brain --- the medial inferior and pre-central areas, as well as the hippocampus and middle
temporal regions and the limbic areas. Some of these are involved in emotional responses, Faro said.

During a truthful response, the fMRI showed activation of parts of the brain's frontal lobe, temporal lobe and cingulate gyrus.

Faro said the study was small and limited. Volunteers were not asked to try especially hard to deceive the equipment, he said -- noting
that it has been documented that some people can fool a polygraph using various techniques.

Using fMRI as a lie detector is expensive, but it may be worthwhile in some cases -- such as trying to question a terrorism suspect, or in
a high-profile corporate crime case, Faro said.
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Look At This

Can't Hide Your Lying ... Face?

02:00 AM Oct, 14, 2004 EDT

By one account, the first lie in the history of the world came when Cain invented the "who, me?" defense and denied knowing anything
about the murder of his brother, Abel. Ever since then, people have been trying to figure out how to detect when someone -- a spouse, a
criminal, a president -- isn't telling the truth.

Now, about a century into the scientific exploration of lying, American researchers are exploring lie-detection technologies that may
banish polygraph machines to the history books.

At the University of Houston, a computer scientist is trying to uncover lies by measuring heat levels in the face. In South Carolina, a
professor hopes she has found the key to deception in brain waves. Elsewhere, researchers are looking at everything from speech
patterns to eye movements to "brain fingerprints."

Success remains elusive, however, and no newfangled lie-detection machines appear ready for prime time. Skeptics, meanwhile,
doubt that any technology will improve much on the mixed record of polygraph machines, which are often used in the United States to
screen employees and test the truthfulness of criminal suspects.

"A lot of people believe there is some particular reaction that you give when you're lying but not when you're telling the truth, but that's
false," said David Lykken, professor emeritus of psychology at the University of Minnesota. Studies show that polygraphs do a fairly
effective job of detecting liars by picking up on stress levels, but they also produce "false positives" -- suggesting that a truth teller is
lying -- and appear to be susceptible to manipulation by subjects.

Enter the polygraph alternatives. According to Lykken, the most effective lie-detection technique isn't a traditional polygraph examination
but instead a "guilty knowledge" test, in which a polygraph machine measures the reactions of people when they see several items. If
they glimpse an item that's familiar -- like a knife or gun -- their bodies should respond differently as recognition dawns on them.

The problem with this technique is that it requires interrogators to have special knowledge, such as details of a crime that haven't
shown up in the media, said Jennifer Vendemia, professor of psychology at the University of South Carolina. She's turned instead to the
study of brain waves.

"When you tell a lie, it's a cognitive behavior like any other, like doing an interesting math problem," she said. "You have to engage in a
certain number of cognitive activities -- you have to pull the truthful information from your memory, inhibit that information, create a
deceptive response and make a decision to deliver that response. You have to engage in these steps to tell a lie, a complicated
process involving different parts of the brain."

Vendemia is developing ways to measure these different steps in the brain. She says her brain-wave tracking system can detect 94
percent of lies in laboratory tests.

Others are looking elsewhere for clues to deception, from eye movement to verbal giveaways. Some, like Vendemia, think the answer
lies under the skin. Using a thermal-scanning device whose hardware alone cost more than $200,000, two researchers say they've
found a way to detect stress by measuring blood flow in the face.

In 2002, University of Texas computer science professor Ioannis Pavlidis and Mayo Clinic endocrinologist James Levine reported (.pdf)
that heat around the eyes -- a sign of increased blood flow -- appeared to uncover six of eight lying subjects. The scanner identified 11
of 12 truth tellers as honest.

The trick is to figure out which signs of stress in the face reveal deception, Pavlidis said. (Polygraph examiners face a similar challenge,
according to Lykken, who said the problem with lie detectors is that "all you get from measuring any of the responses is that a subject is
emotionally aroused, disturbed or surprised by this question, but you don't know what that means.")

According to Pavlidis, whose goal is a "more reliable, more user-friendly, more automated" lie detector, a new study on thermal facial
scanning should appear in mid-2005.

But when will a better lie detector show up? Vendemia predicts it might be as soon as 2010, perhaps using elements of thermal facial
scans, brain scans and other technology.

Don't hold your breath, said Thomas O'Connor, an associate professor of justice studies at North Carolina Wesleyan College who
teaches about lie detection.

"You'll have a situation where you're pitting human nature up against machines, and human nature is going to win this particular battle,"
he said. "I think lying is here to stay."
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