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Published byClaud Jones Modified over 8 years ago
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fMRI in Detection of Deception
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What is functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging? A magnetic field is passed through the organ of interest, the brain, during a psychological function— deception--causing the flow of oxygen (Oxy-Hemoglobin) to active parts of brain to “show” up as active fields. They are said to light up. Here is a slide of some deception areas:
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There are typically LIE and TRUE conditions… *One subtracts the activation –the amount of lighting up-- of truth areas from lie areas. *But how does one know which areas to look in? I.e., what are the “regions of interest?”
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First, one tries to identify what cognitive functions are involved in deception… For example, in most deception protocols, there is involvement of 1. Working memory, 2. Inhibitory control, 3. Task Switching
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For example, here from a metanalytic review by Christ et al. (2009)… …are the foci in which various deception protocols cause cortical activation; do they all correspond to working memory, inhibitory control, and task switching localizations? (There are surely many areas…)
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OK, in the following, we see Deception areas surrounded/bounded by black borders… …juxtaposed with cognitive function areas. Is there correspondence?
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Then, there’s the familiar countermeasure problem: Here are the results of a paper* under review by Ganis, Rosenfeld, & Meixner. *A 3 ST protocol with both ERPs and fMRI (separate studies). The P300 part replicated Rosenfeld et al. (2004) exactly. fMRI results follow:
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