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How a 1960s Discovery In Neuroscience Spawned a Military Project

Harperdog writes "This is pretty fascinating: The Chronicle of Higher Ed has an article about a DARPA project that allows researchers to scan satellite photos, video, etc., and have a computer pick up differences in brain activity to tell whether an image has been seen...images that might flash by before conscious recognition. From the article: 'In a small, anonymous office in the Trump Tower, 28 floors above Wall Street, a man sits in front of a computer screen sifting through satellite images of a foreign desert. The images depict a vast, sandy emptiness, marked every so often by dunes and hills. He is searching for man-made structures: houses, compounds, airfields, any sign of civilization that might be visible from the sky. The images flash at a rate of 20 per second, so fast that before he can truly perceive the details of each landscape, it is gone. He pushes no buttons, takes no notes. His performance is near perfect.'"

13 of 112 comments (clear)

  1. See, the brain is a great computer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    It just has a terribly documented API.

    1. Re:See, the brain is a great computer by icebike · · Score: 4, Funny

      Well the API has too many wrappers and obsolete interfaces to take care of.
      If we could just get that processor out of that power hungry finicky motherboard and package in glassware, and maybe hook up hundred of them...

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    2. Re:See, the brain is a great computer by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's the user manual, not the API documentation. If you cannot tell the difference, hand in your geek card!

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    3. Re:See, the brain is a great computer by Ryanrule · · Score: 4, Funny

      Kids on your lawn again?

    4. Re:See, the brain is a great computer by EvolutionInAction · · Score: 5, Funny

      Doubly appropriate, since the user manual is always written after the fact, and inconsistent with the rest of the documentation.

    5. Re:See, the brain is a great computer by yndrd1984 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      too bad you didn't stick to your education until the magic happens and you realize that it's teaching you how to think

      I think you guys are conflating 'education' with 'schooling'. "I have never let my schooling interfere with my education." - Mark Twain

  2. New Airport Scanner by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Sir, please sit down and stare at this screen for 60 seconds.

    (13.18 seconds later)

    BEEP! Warning: this person has seen pedophile material!

    After weeks of research to prove he's innocent, the man brings his family photo album in which we can see naked baby pictures that look very similar in decor, photo angle, etc.

  3. Re:Welcome to the future by dgatwood · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Drink Coke.

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    Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

  4. Re:Welcome to the future by icebike · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Google Glasses can be disguised, and roughly half the population wear some form of glasses anyway.
    No, they will not be DOA, they will be wildly successful, especially if they can be made to look like regular sunglasses or prescription glasses.

    Do you run around punching people who wear Bluetooth headsets in the ear?
     

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    Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
  5. What was seen cannot be unseen. by game+kid · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Things like plot and game-mechanic spoilers, shock sites, and things I'd generally rather not read or view instead burn into my brain even before I get a chance to realize what hit my eyes. Other things (however important) end up filed away in my brain's apparently vast realm of Please Jog My Memory, I Forget.

    I'm pretty sure it's normal (if not crucial for natural responses like fight-or-flight), but it still amuses me (except when it disturbs me).

    --
    You can hold down the "B" button for continuous firing.
  6. Big Brother via Terry Shaivo? by Yakasha · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Hook up a bunch of vegges with functional visuals to city-wide cameras (or whatever venue you want to watch). Stick a wanted poster next to the screen and wait for the spike.

  7. Re:Welcome to the future by PlusFiveTroll · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Looking at someone while talking to them conveys much more information then just the speech alone. Does one person have a confused look on their face? Is the other party trying to stop you from speaking so they can ask something non-verbally? Does the other person look like they totally don't give a fuck?

    I do hope you understand the importance of nonverbal communication in conversation. Engagement is a very important part of communication, and is much of the reason why people still travel long distances to have face to face meetings in business. It's not just some people, it's most people that feel important when you look at them when you talk, especially the people that have the greatest monetary influence on your life, bosses, girlfriends, customers...

    A lot of geeks and nerds get the label, not because of their obsession with their trade, but the inability to communicate with other people properly.

    Q: How can a woman tell the difference between a geek and a jock?
    A: A jock stares at her breasts, a geek stares at her shoes.

  8. Re:dude by blackest_k · · Score: 4, Informative

    The cheapest robot is the human being, and if you ever worked on a factory floor you would know that is usually true. A shift doing one simple action over and over again to the pace of a machine.

    To give one simple example a flow wrap machine for a crisp/chip factory doing a multipack. The production process is already automated as much as possible. A bulk loader trailer (a lorry trailer with a conveyor in the bottom of it feeds potato's into a flume the PLC turns the conveyor on and off as required controlling the flow of potato's into the system. the flume takes the potato's to a 3 stage peeler which are abrasive rollers with progressively finer rolls. next the grader halver
    which just passes through potato's of an appropriate size or cuts them down in size. the next stage is a number of spinning drums with razor blades which cut the chips/crisps followed by a bath to remove starch and into a fryer. On exiting the chips/crisps are run down a belt and made to jump onto a second one above this are camera's and a series of air jets the cameras are looking for burnt bits when they spot a burnt crisp the air jet blasts the burnt chip down between the 2 belts onto a cross belt and then feeds back to the first belt since the airjet will take some good chips of as well as the burn't ones so the waste is kept down. So far two people have jobs largely changing the blades on the chipper and monitoring the oven. producing about 7500kg of chips an hour.

    the next stage is to flavour stations and packing which is fed by a series of vibrating conveyors (which are stainless steel troughs not belts). At a flavour station flavouring is added and a multi-head weigher collects the chips into bins and that calculates the weights needed to get your 25g bag eg two bins have 8g and 17g so these are opened together the packets are a sheet of plastic foil which is folded and seamed and crimped and cut. the top of one bag becomes the base of the next bag and when the chips are dropped the bag isn't made until part way through the fall.

    The sealed packet then hits another conveyor which weighs the bags to check they are in specification and rejects the ones that are not (very few in practice) then either onto a rotating table where the human puts 48 in a box. or to the robot which unfolds the carton tapes it lines up 8 bags picks them up puts them in making 6 layers and seals it (if it only picks up 7 it rejects them which can be a big problem) and then the human stacks the cartons. That packing robot is an expensive piece of kit costing roughly 10 years worth of wages of a human packer, but can run 24/7 usually 24/5.

    Back to multipacks a flow wrap machine has a sectioned belt so flavour A goes in 1 flavour B in 2 and flavour C in the third. the multipack is essentially a large packet with a simpler machine feeding it. it's old technology really (you can do a similar process to making the actual bags with a bigger multihead weigher) , but to feed that machine you have a bunch of operators who just put bags into the sections pick up drop pick up drop repeat for 8 hours 5 days a week pretty mind numbing soul destroying work but it's a job. You actually automate yourself to do it, more muscle memory than thought, pacing the machine. they do at least move stations every 15 minutes but you pretty much know how many laps you do before each break and per shift.

    Thing is there are a lot of jobs like this just as soul destroying so the guy processing 5 images a second is his job any worse than this type of repetitive pick up and drop job?

    The camera system on the crisp line essentially identifies black pixels and uses that to determine when product is burnt, a steam peeler (super heated steam blasts new potato's for about 30 seconds) uses a similar camera system to identify potato's with skin still attached. again its dark where it should be light. Systems maybe are better at recognising features these days but it always will be hard, maybe detecting a human detecting a feature is easier, does it have to be h