New Instruments of
Surveillance and Social Control:
Wireless Technologies which Target
the Neuronal Functioning of the Brain

Global
Research, March 9, 2008
Increasingly there are indications that the uses of wireless
technologies have been developed to target an individual’s
biological body, with specific focus upon the neuronal functioning
of the brain. In this paper I examine how some of these uses have
had detrimental effects, and what this implies for both present and
upcoming developments for particular wireless/sensor technologies. I
consider whether this is not shifting dangerously towards a psycho–civilised
society, where greater emphasis is placed upon social control and
pre–emptive strategies.
Introduction
The rate of
technological innovation in some fields is developing exponentially
with new advances in wireless sensor networks, ubiquitous and
pervasive computing, motes, nodes, grids, and media platforms.
Information flows are increasing not only in their quantity and
density, but also in their immersive quality. The historical
developments of information communication systems can be said to
have traced a similar path to how nation states have organised their
global power base and dominance. First, power over the land and
dominance in waging war on one’s neighbours through ground battle,
the domesticated horse and the infantry soldier. Second, domination
of the seas and the strongest Navy gave advantage to sea–faring
Empires, such as Portugal, Spain, and Britain. The end of naval
dominance then gave rise to the advent of the railroad and the
dynamic change in transport technology, both in routes and in speed.
The transcontinental scope of the railroads finally gave out to air
power, winning the World Wars through dominance in the skies. And
now, finally, the ‘final frontier’ is space, for ‘the vast potential
resource base of outer space is presumably so enormous, effectively
inexhaustible, that any state that can control it will ultimately
dominate the earth’ [1].
Likewise,
modern communication technologies have moved from the land (the
telegraph); to the sea (wireless radio; radar); back to land
(cables; fibre optics); and to the intermediate land/air stage
(masts/antenna); to the outer frontier of space (satellites); and
finally now even beyond these frontiers towards a solar system
Internet (Turner, 2007). Whoever controls these channels for
communication can, in some degree, to be said to ‘dominate the
earth’. And the possible uses of wireless communications for the
dissemination, targeting, and receiving of clandestine
‘communications’ is an active industry.
The aim of
this paper is to examine some of the examples and instances where
the use of wireless technologies have been developed to target an
individual’s biological body, with specific focus upon the neuronal
functioning of the brain. I also show how some of these uses have
had detrimental effects, and what this implies for both present and
upcoming developments in particular wireless/sensor technologies.
This paper shows that an upcoming area of importance is
neurotechnology, a discipline that places brain functioning and
knowledge of the human brain as primary. Technologies are now being
researched and trialled that seek to penetrate and, to a degree,
intervene in neural functioning. Whilst some have termed this
positively as a coming ‘neural society’ (Lynch, 2004), I consider
whether this is not shifting dangerously towards a psycho–civilised
society, where greater emphasis is placed upon social control and
pre–emptive strategies. I trace a timeline that follows developments
from a historical context to the present; and finally to future
scenarios and implications. It may be that the social pursuit of
increasingly connective and immersive technologies has the potential
to open up a Pandora’s box of problematics.
Opening Pandora’s box
The
background to this narrative begins with the story of a true
Pandora’s box — a U.S. project titled Project Pandora that was
organized and administered by the psychology division of the
psychiatry research section of Walter Reed Army Institute of
Research (WRAIR). This project was set–up to specifically research
programs on the health effects of microwave exposure following the
‘Moscow Embassy’ incident. From 1953 to 1976, the Soviets directed
microwave radiation at the U.S. embassy in Moscow from the roof of
an adjacent building. Whilst this clandestine microwave targeting
was allegedly known for some time by U.S. officials, the event was
not made public until 1976 when the U.S. State Department finally
accused the Soviet Union of bombarding the U.S. embassy in Moscow
with microwave radiation for illicit purposes. It was initially
reported as a harmless procedure for charging Soviet spy–bugs:
‘Soviet antennas, which are beaming the waves in both to charge up
the batteries of their listening devices and to jam embassy–based
U.S. electronic monitoring of Russian communications’ (Time,
1976a; 1976b). However, the State Department soon indicated that, in
addition to interference mechanisms, the microwave radiation could
have serious adverse effects on the health of the occupants of the
embassy (O’Connor, 1993). This was supported by Soviet data in which
Soviet non–ionising electromagnetic energy (NIEM) ‘research
literature reported adverse health effects in laboratory animals and
in Soviet radar workers at levels well below the 10 mW/cm2
U.S. ANSI safety recommendations’ [2].
Despite this being below the U.S. recommended levels the Soviet
standards excluded military personnel whilst the U.S. did not,
according to the National Council on Radiation Protection and
Measurements (NCRP), 1986 (O’Connor, 1993).
Soviet
studies in the area of electromagnetic microwave radiation reported
psychological symptoms in human subjects that included lethargy,
lack of concentration, headaches, depression, and impotence [3].
O’Connor notes how the Soviet medical journals termed these
collective symptoms microwave sickness whilst the U.S. literature
referred to the symptoms as neurasthenia (1993). Time
magazine reported in March 1976 that the State Department launched:
|
a medical
investigation of the thousands of U.S. diplomats and
their families who served in Moscow since the early
1960s. In the wake of the microwave disclosures,
former embassy employees and their families have
recalled suffering strange ailments during their
tenure in Moscow, ranging from eye tics and
headaches to heavy menstrual flows. Some point out
that former Ambassadors to Moscow Charles Bohlen and
Llewellyn Thompson both died of cancer, within the
last two years one other Moscow diplomat died of
cancer, and five women who lived there have
undergone cancer–related mastectomies — although no
medical authorities attribute these deaths and
illnesses to radiation. (Time, 1976b) |
U.S. officials and military, long before the public exposure, were
aware and concerned about the consequences of microwave bombardment
of civilian and military targets. In 1972 the U.S. Defense
Intelligence Agency (DIA) released an internal report (later
declassified through the Freedom Of Information Act [FOIA] Program [4])
that had been previously prepared by the U.S. Army Office of the
Surgeon General Medical Intelligence Office titled ‘Controlled
Offensive Behaviour — USSR’ (initially released in July 1972). The
report states that
| This report
summarizes the information available on Soviet
research on human vulnerability as it relates to
incapacitating individuals or small groups. The
information contained in this study is a review and
evaluation of Soviet research in this field of
revolutionary methods of influencing human behavior
and is intended as an aid in the development of
countermeasures for the protection of U.S. or allied
personnel. Due to the nature of the Soviet research
in the area of reorientation or incapacitation of
human behavior, this report emphasises the
individual as opposed to groups. (LaMothe, 1972) |
It is
interesting to note that the Report authors believed the Soviet
research to be in the area of ‘reorientation’; suggesting that the
U.S. were worried over concerns that the Soviets may be planning a
mass zapping of U.S. citizens with the hope of ‘brainwashing’ them
into a newly orientated ideological outlook. The 174–page Report is
extensive, with much material extended upon various forms of beamed
energies and wireless strategies. On the opening section on
Electromagnetic Energy the report concludes that
|
Super–high
frequency electromagnetic oscillations (SHF) may
have potential use as a technique for altering human
behavior. Soviet Union and other foreign literature
sources contain over 500 studies devoted to the
biological effect of SHF. Lethal and non–lethal
aspects have been shown to exist. In certain
non–lethal exposures, definite behavioural changes
have occurred. [5] |
During this
time the U.S. establishment was not naïve to the potential of
conducting neurological at–a–distance effects upon human
behaviour.
In the 1970s
José Manuel Rodríguez Delgado was a controversial figure in
neuroscience; a professor of physiology at Yale University, he was
an acclaimed neuroscientist. In 1970 “the New York Times
Magazine hailed him in a cover story as the impassioned prophet
of a new ‘psychocivilized society’ whose members would influence and
alter their own mental functions” [6].
Yet two decades earlier, in 1952, Delgado co–authored the first
peer–reviewed paper describing long–term implantation of electrodes
in humans (Horgan, 2005). As an example of the achievement into
wireless–neurological devices Delgado’s most famous experiment took
place in 1963 at a bull–breeding ranch in Cordoba, Spain. Delgado
implanted radio equipped electrodes, which he termed ‘stimoceivers’,
into the brains of several ‘fighting’ bulls and stood in a bullring
with one bull at a time and attempted to control the actions of the
bull by pressing buttons on a handheld transmitter. In one instance
Delgado was able to stop a charging bull in its tracks only a few
feet away from him by the press of a button. The New York Times
published a front page story on the event, “calling it ‘the most
spectacular demonstration ever performed of the deliberate
modification of animal behavior through external control of the
brain’” [7].
In 1969 Delgado described wireless brain–behaviour modification and
its implications in his book Physical Control of the Mind:
Toward a Psychocivilized Society (1969). Delgado’s research
during this time was supported not only by academic grants but also
by the U.S. Office of Naval Research. This research is now over
forty years old, and much has happened in the intervening four
decades.
Technologies that can wirelessly transmit information from and
to the body is an area of research that has attracted various
interested parties post–World War II. Such energy–information
distribution and targeting within the electromagnetic spectrum
can variously be used for medical, industrial, military, and
telecommunications purposes. I now turn to examine some of the
military–industrial research and uses of wireless technologies.
Beams, firewalls and brain scanning:
Inside the military–industrial complex
Researcher
Igor Smirnov of the Russian Academy of Sciences is by all accounts
an odd person, referred to by a Newsweek article as ‘A
Subliminal Dr. Strangelove’ (Elliott and Barry, 1994). Smirnov was
apparently contacted by the FBI during the Davidian sect siege in
Waco, Texas in 1993. Experts from the FBI Counter–Terrorism Center
met with Smirnov in Arlington, Virginia to discuss ways of affecting
the behaviour of Davidian sect leader David Koresh. Smirnov’s plan
was to send subliminal messages through the phone lines during
negotiations; and for targeting David Koresh the plan was to use the
voice of Charlton Heston to subliminally play God (Elliott and
Barry, 1994). Smirnov’s strategies, whilst sounding eccentric, are
closely tied with military research into behaviour modification via
wireless transmissions. Smirnov’s laboratory in Moscow is named the
Institute of Psycho–Correction and using electroencephalograph
scanning (EEG) he measures brain waves which he then computes to
create a map of various human impulses–brain waves correlation. This
data can then be used for experimenting upon affecting brain–body
modification at–a–distance. Asked in a 2004 interview whether it was
possible to defeat terrorism Smirnov replied that
| Only
informational war is capable of defeating terrorism
completely. And we possess this weapon. Peoples’
actions can in fact be controlled by unnoticed
acoustic influence. Look — it’s easy. All I have to
do is record my voice, apply special coding, which
converts my voice to mere noise and afterwards, all
we have to do is record some music on top of that.
The words are indistinguishable to your conscious;
however, your unconscious can hear them clearly. If
we were to play this music over and over again on
the radio for instance, people will soon start
developing paranoia. This is the simplest weapon. (Pravda,
2004) |
Smirnov’s capabilities were demonstrated to U.S. observers as
far back as 1991 when infra–sound — a very low frequency
transmission — was shown to be able to transmit acoustic
messages via bone conduction [8].
Military
strategist Timothy Thomas examined these implications in his paper
‘The Mind Has No Firewall’ in which he states that ‘We are on the
threshold of an era in which these data processors of the human body
may be manipulated or debilitated. Examples of unplanned attacks on
the body’s data–processing capability are well–documented’ [9].
He references a Russian military article on the same subject which
declared that “‘humanity stands on the brink of a psychotronic war’
with the mind and body as the focus” [10].
The context here is that the human body is a complex communication
system that is constantly receiving signal inputs, both external and
internal.
| The “data”
the body receives from external sources — such as
electromagnetic, vortex, or acoustic energy waves —
or creates through its own electrical or chemical
stimuli can be manipulated or changed just as the
data (information) in any hardware system can be
altered. [11] |
Thus,
Military thinking in this area is beginning to shift towards a
systemic viewpoint which considers the human as an open system
rather than as a closed, bounded system.
In this new
systemic approach the human communicates with, and can be
communicated by, the environment through information flows and
communications media. By this understanding military thinking has
begun to openly declare that ‘one’s physical environment, whether
through electromagnetic, gravitational, acoustic, or other effects,
can cause a change in the psycho–physiological condition of an
organism’ [12].
Simpson’s investigations into the sociological discipline of
communication research, which crystallised in the U.S. in the early
1950s, shows that it was financed and mentored by governmental
psychological warfare programs:
| Government
psychological warfare programs helped shape mass
communication research into a distinct scholarly
field, strongly influencing the choice of leaders
and determining which of the competing scientific
paradigms of communication would be funded,
elaborated, and encouraged to prosper. [13] |
Dominance
over the airwaves, and the capability to exert coercive control over
information communications is a vital area in military planning.
Documented and declassified evidence shows that what may have begun
as a program in standardized propaganda and psychological warfare
has now developed into research on wireless information targeting
and ‘psychocivilized’ control practices. To this effect the term
‘psycho–terrorism’ was coined by Anisimov of the Moscow Anti–Psychotronic
Center and Anisimov admits to testing such devices as are said to
‘take away a part of the information which is stored in a man’s
brain. It is sent to a computer, which reworks it to the level
needed for those who need to control the man, and the modified
information is then reinserted into the brain’ [14].
In such cases there is concern that the ‘mind has no firewall’ and
may be vulnerable to accidental, unwanted and/or rogue
interventions. Thomas’s paper concludes by stating that ‘In reality,
the game is about protecting or affecting signals, waves, and
impulses that can influence the data–processing elements of systems,
computers, or people. We are potentially the biggest victims of
information warfare, because we have neglected to protect ourselves’
[15].
The Air
Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) brief on this subject titled
‘Controlled Effects’ also noted the power to use the electromagnetic
spectrum for wirelessly interfering into human subjects’ thinking
and behaviour. By this stage the strategy had been dubbed
‘non–lethal weapons’, as explored more fully in the work of
non–lethal defence at Los Alamos by retired Army Colonel John B.
Alexander (Alexander, 1999). The AFRL report states that
| the panel
investigated the potential for using electromagnetic
and other nonconventional force capabilities to
achieve strategic, tactical, lethal, and nonlethal
force projection ... . For the Controlled Personnel
Effects capability, the S&T panel explored the
potential for targeting individuals with nonlethal
force, from a militarily useful range, to make
selected adversaries think or act according to our
needs. (AFRL, 2004) |
These
theories and concerns to affect command and control at–a–distance
were echoing the conclusions from a much larger and significant
military report that was published and made available in 1996 titled
‘New World Vistas’. ‘New World Vistas’ was a major undertaking by
the U.S. Air Force Scientific Advisory Board to examine future
developments in weapons, and totalled 14 volumes of studies. The
fifteenth ‘ancillary’ volume concluded by putting forth some
potential developments for a possible future man–machine
integration. In a section dealing with ‘Biological Process Control’
the Report states that
| One can
envision the development of electromagnetic energy
sources, the output of which can be pulsed, shaped,
and focused, that can couple with the human body in
a fashion that will allow one to prevent voluntary
muscular movements, control emotions (and thus
actions), produce sleep, transmit suggestions,
interfere with both short–term and long–term memory,
produce an experience set, and delete an experience
set. (USAF Scientific Advisory Board, 1995) |
In
military–speak the term ‘experience set’ implies a person’s stored
memories and life experiences; thus suggesting that such a
technology could delete and then replace a person’s memories, or
‘experience set’. Research and development along these lines have so
far materialised a technology dubbed by the military as active
denial system (ADS).
The Active
Denial System is a non–lethal, directed–energy weapon system
recently unveiled by the U.S. military and which directs, or pulses,
electromagnetic radiation at a frequency of 95 Gigahertz (GHz)
towards the target subjects. The radiated beam of millimetre–wave
energy can travel over a range of 500m and heats the water molecules
in the epidermis skin up to 54C (130F) (BBC, 2007). The result can
be an intensely painful burning sensation. Such a system was
designed for such uses as crowd control. A fully operational and
mounted system was demonstrated to journalists by U.S. military
personnel at Moody Air Force Base, Georgia, on 24 January 2007. A
Reuters correspondent who volunteered to be shot with the beam
during the demonstration described it as ‘similar to a blast from a
very hot oven — too painful to bear without diving for cover’ (BBC,
2007). The diagram below illustrates the active denial system
(ADS).
These
technologies show uses of wireless–to–body communication and
directed energy weapons for possible military attack or defence
purposes. Another area for research and development is in both
military and industrial uses for operator enhancement.
Real–time
brain scanning of pilots and similar operators under stress is an
increasingly active area for research involving military and
industrial partnerships. Since the early 1990s research has been
made into detecting and interpreting brain and body signals,
especially brainwaves, for computerized monitoring of pilots. This
information can be used to measure pilot fatigue and to compensate
for this with increased automation of the airplane in order to avoid
pilot error. Initially this was conducted by measuring the pilot’s
brain waves through unobtrusive sponge sensors in the flight helmet:
| By
measuring the amplitude of the brain waves
generated, fatigue of the pilot can be recognized.
By increasing the brightness of the instrumental
panel lights, the amplitude of the brain waves can
be returned to their normal height, thus
compensating for fatigue. To get the “evoked
response” from the pilot’s brain, the instrument
panel lights could be made to flash so fast that the
pilot would not be aware of the flashes. [16] |
Researchers
have said that the brain can ‘register’ up to 145 flickers per
second, which can then be followed up by beaming a near infrared
light into the subject’s eye, causing a spot of light to be
reflected off the cornea in order to track eye movement and measure
the degree of pilot concentration. This type of research, which is
still ongoing, has been referred to by at least one current R&D
laboratory as ‘Real–Time EEG for Operator State’ [17].
Brain monitoring of people in situations where fatigue could be
fatal now involves real–time analysis and observation of motorists.
A technology now being considered is one called ‘Sensation’.
 |
This
technology is non–intrusive and includes a small
camera that monitors a driver’s eye movements,
looking out for repeated blinking, which can be
evidence of tiredness. To compliment this the
driver’s seat is also lined with a material which
monitors changes in body temperature. The steering
wheel too checks for handling pressure. Finally,
other sensors, if needed, can be fitted to the
finger and ear to send out measurements of pressure
to indicate fatigue and levels of concentration. The
driver is now wirelessly monitored, both by camera
and wireless sensors, to create a more extensive
immersive driving experience (Millward, 2006). |
This
research and these innovations indicate that a shift is occurring in
how the human is enmeshed into an increasingly information saturated
environment. These developments recognise that the human body is
itself becoming the most capable data–processing subject. The rest
of this paper explores how these trends to envelop the body–brain
into an environment of information flows are being developed into
social and commercial applications.
Emotional gaming and dangerous intentions:
Inside the social–civil sphere
The use of
EEG brain scanning has now moved into the gaming industry with
up–to–date developments in sensory gaming. Recently Emotiv publicly
released information on their upcoming ‘Project Epoc’, a
developmental technology that interprets electrical signals emitted
by the brain and converts them into actions on a computer. In this
way the user/gamer is able to direct actions via their thoughts in
the online environment. Below are pictures of two prototypes which
the company expects to market some time in 2008 [18].
The company
Web site claims that they provide the ultimate human–computer
interface and that they are pioneers in brain computer interface
technology. In their press release of 7 March 2007 they state that
| Emotiv has
created the first brain computer interface
technology that can detect and process both human
conscious thoughts and non–conscious emotions. The
technology, which comprises a headset and a suite of
applications, allows computers to differentiate
between particular thoughts such as lifting an
object or rotating it; detect and mimic a user’s
expressions, such as a smile or wink; and respond to
emotions such as excitement or calmness. [19] |
In the same
press release the company foresees in the future that ‘Emotiv’s
technology has the potential to be applied to numerous industries,
including interactive television, accessibility design, market
research, medicine, and security’ [20].
A similar corporate gaming company, NeuroSky, claims to have gone
even further than Emotiv and reduced ‘the brainwave pickup to the
minimum specification imaginable — a single electrode. Existing
versions of this electrode are small enough to fit into a mobile
phone and ... they will soon be shrunk to the size of a thumbnail,
enabling people to wear them without noticing’ (Economist,
2007). The company Web site claims its ‘bio sensor and signal
processing system for the consumer market’ will unlock ‘worlds of
new applications such as consumer electronics, health, wellness,
education and training’ [21].
Clearly
there is a potential commercial market envisioned here for
wireless–brain technology that goes beyond the sphere of gaming.
Somewhat on the extreme to this, wireless acoustic transmissions
have now been developed to ‘stop’ people from over–gaming; in other
words, as a treatment for gaming addiction. In highly technologised
Asian countries such as South Korea teenagers are spending an
unhealthy amount of time at their computers in gaming environments.
There have even been instances where gamers have died after
extensively long sessions in front of a computer without a break,
such as in MMORPGs (Massive Multiplayer Online Role–Playing Game).
South Korean company Xtive, established in 2005, spent a year of
research to develop a system of acoustic sound waves that act as
subliminal transmissions during the gaming experience:
| We
incorporated messages into an acoustic sound wave
telling gamers to stop playing. The messages are
told 10,000 to 20,000 times per second ... . Game
users can’t recognize the sounds. But their
subconscious is aware of them and the chances are
high they will quit playing ... . Game companies can
install a system, which delivers the inaudible
sounds after it recognizes a young user has kept
playing after a preset period of time. (Tae–gyu,
2007) |
This
emphasises that research into techno–information flows are
increasingly being developed that wirelessly interact with a person
as a biological construct, utilising the already present bio–neural
functioning. And this is a trend that is attracting more corporate
players wishing to enter the field.
Gaming giant
Sony Corporation has submitted and been granted a patent on a device
for transmitting sensory data directly into the human brain. Sony’s
patent describes the device as firing “pulses of ultrasound at the
head to modify firing patterns in targeted parts of the brain,
creating ‘sensory experiences’ ranging from moving images to tastes
and sounds” (Hogan and Fox, 2005). This is based upon a technique
known as transcranial magnetic stimulation that activates the nerves
by using rapidly changing magnetic fields to induce currents in
brain tissue. The patent also claims that this technology could give
blind or deaf people the chance to see or hear. Niels Birbaumer, a
neuroscientist at the University of Tübingen in Germany who has
himself developed similar devices, examined the Sony patent and
commented that ‘I looked at it and found it plausible’ (Hogan and
Fox, 2005). Since Sony’s initial patent application in 2000 (granted
in March 2003), a series of further patents have been applied for.
However, this line of research is not totally new.
For several
years there has been research conducted into decoding thoughts from
the brain for sending signals to an external device such as
manipulating cursors on a screen, which has been developed for
disabled people, as in the case of Matthew Nagle (Pollack, 2006). In
recent years several other companies have emerged claiming to offer
brain–computer wireless interaction for either gaming purposes or
for various health impairment benefits. One example is S.M.A.R.T.
BrainGames, a company based in California that offers EEG caps
designed to treat people with attention deficit and hyperactivity
disorder. The company claims to offer superior neurofeedback
technology at what it calls ‘affordable prices’ [22].
The body–brain is increasingly shifting towards becoming a
biologically–enhanced data processor for wireless reception and
transmission. Computer software giant Microsoft is aware of this and
already ahead of the game.
In 2004
Microsoft was awarded U.S. Patent 6,754,472, titled ‘Method and
apparatus for transmitting power and data using the human body’ [23].
In this patent Microsoft is granted exclusive rights to a technology
that uses the electrical capacity of the human body to act as a
computer network (Adam, 2004). Microsoft envisages ‘using the human
skin’s conductive properties to link a host of electronic devices
around the body, from pagers and personal data assistants (PDA) to
mobile phones and microphones, although the company is
uncharacteristically coy about exactly what it may have in mind’
(Adam, 2004). This supports what Bill Gates himself has said about
the computer finally disappearing into the environment and the world
around us (Gibson, 2005). This may be the ultimate wireless network,
using the complete skin of the body, from fingers to toes, receiving
and transmitting flows of information. The patent also proposes that
an area of skin could even act as a keypad making a person capable
of typing by tapping on their arm (Adam, 2004).
This is a
powerful example of how technologies and technological thinking is
shifting away from external hardware devices towards using the
natural bio-properties of the human body for integration into a
global informational environment. As way of some examples, here are
just two from many of the patents filed that claim to develop
wireless transmission technologies: patents 4,395,600 and 5,507,291.
Patent No. 4,395,600 is titled ‘Auditory subliminal message system
and method’ and is geared towards subliminal messaging to influence
consumer shoppers:
| Ambient
audio signals from the customer shopping area within
a store are sensed and fed to a signal processing
circuit that produces a control signal which varies
with variations in the amplitude of the sensed audio
signals. A control circuit adjusts the amplitude of
an auditory subliminal anti–shoplifting message to
increase with increasing amplitudes of sensed audio
signals and decrease with decreasing amplitudes of
sensed audio signals. This amplitude controlled
subliminal message may be mixed with background
music and transmitted to the shopping area. [24] |
In a similar
manner for affecting an individual’s mental state is patent no.
5,507,291 — ‘Method and an associated apparatus for remotely
determining information as to person’s emotional state’ — which
comes very close to what has been discussed on military uses of
information warfare:
| In a method
for remotely determining information relating to a
person’s emotional state, a waveform energy having a
predetermined frequency and a predetermined
intensity is generated and wirelessly transmitted
towards a remotely located subject. Waveform energy
emitted from the subject is detected and
automatically analyzed to derive information
relating to the individual’s emotional state. [25] |
In this
scenario information flows are two-way with the body-brain emitting
as well as receiving. Yet with the human body–brain becoming a site
for data transfer and reception, there are concerns that it is
increasingly becoming a target for various corporate interests. And
not only corporate interests are involved in these developments,
however, for there are also recent innovative technologies in this
area that offer serious implications for social privacy and liberty
at a state level.
At first the
idea sounds like nothing more than science fiction. Indeed, it even
appeared as a central feature in the film ‘Minority Report’. This is
the notion of pre–cognition: to be able to know a person’s actions
before those actions are committed. Yet now a team of
neuroscientists have developed a technique that can scan a brain and
learn from the patterns of neuronal activity what a person is
thinking or intending to do. This research is the culmination of
recent studies where brain imaging has been used to identify
particular brain patterns pertaining to such behaviour as violence,
lying, and racial prejudice (Sample, 2007). To achieve this the team
‘used high–resolution brain scans to identify patterns of activity
before translating them into meaningful thoughts, revealing what a
person planned to do in the near future’ (Sample, 2007). This is the
first acknowledged instance of having the technical capacity to
judge whether people have the intention to commit a
criminal act regardless of actual hard physical evidence of the
crime. According to Prof Haynes: ‘We see the danger that this might
become compulsory one day, but we have to be aware that if we
prohibit it, we are also denying people who aren’t going to commit
any crime the possibility of proving their innocence’ (Sample,
2007). Since this technology is so new there are no current ethical
or moral debates on this issue and the implications for its civil
use are worrying. If developed these ‘techniques may eventually have
wide–ranging implications for everything from criminal
interrogations to airline security checks. And that alarms some
ethicists who fear the technology could one day be abused by
authorities, marketers or employers’ (Cheng, 2007).
A
hypothetical situation in the future might place these scanning
devices within regular x–ray scanning machines at airports. On
passing through to the passenger lounge all travellers will be
scanned not only for potentially dangerous physical objects but also
for dangerous intentions. Yet who has not had a ‘dangerous
intention’? Or rather, to quote a more familiar phrase: ‘He who is
without sin among you, let him be the first to throw a stone’ [26].
In this manner all travellers will have to safeguard their thoughts
at all times; who is to know whether such scanning devices are
embedded into the walls of the airport lounge and corridors? Or in
the toilets; on board the airplane? This uncertain and somewhat
dystopian scenario is one that could shift technologised states into
psycho–civilised societies where thoughts and intentions become part
of terrorist discourse. This could be seen as an extreme case of
convergence between the social compromises required to facilitate
efficient physical–digital infrastructures and the need for
securitised mobilities (Wood and Graham, 2006). It also resembles
the extremity of constructing an all–inclusive technological web of
complex information flows that bypasses traditional forms of
interface.
This sees a
shift away from earlier prototypes of the hardware–heavy cyborg,
such as the early ‘wearcam’ work of Steve Mann [27],
towards people actively engaging with their informational
environments both in terms of security and surveillance. In some
ways these developments have contributed to a rise in acts of
self–surveillance, or sousveillance.
(In)Securities,
self–sensoring and sousveillance:
Inside the social panopticon
Fears over
security and safety have reached new levels in the opening decade of
the twenty–first century. It is, in all respects, a post–millennium
state of insecurity. The older and more familiar paradigms of
warfare and security were based upon binaries (e.g.,
Democracy vs. Communism; friend vs. foe). To some degree this binary
distinction is still maintained and played out in media and cultural
discourse as Freedom vs. Anti–Freedom, or West vs. Islam. Yet upon
deeper scrutiny this manifests as an asymmetrical arrangement:
order/authority vs. guerrilla non–compliance. A terror suspect can
therefore no longer be easily identified as ‘the enemy’ which
requires that all civilians be categorised in a state of ‘potential
terrorist’. This is especially so since the notion of ‘home–grown
terrorist’ is playing out the role of insurgency and resistance from
within. This subtle shift in categorisation has seen a parallel move
in the increase of the militarization of the civil sphere. By this I
argue that civil space is increasingly becoming a ‘censor/sensored
zone’ where security issues — surveillance, tracking, identification
— are played out.
This zone,
which mobile bodies pass through and negotiate, is characterised by
a pervasive field of information, code, and signifiers that
increasingly constructs the ‘social’. Such a coded environment has
the potential to be extremely intrusive and goes beyond the normal
ken of so–called civil liberties. Under the sway of a post September
11 scenario and amid an orchestrated ‘war on terror’ many of these
intrusive technologies are in rapid development, so much so that the
U.K. Government’s Information Commissioner himself states that we
live in a surveillance society (Information Commissioner, 2006) [28].
These systems of tracking and tracing surveillance involve step
changes that are taking place gradually in many industrialised
societies, especially in the U.S. and the U.K. [29].
Developments
in sensor technologies and ubiquitous computing often focus on the
interfaces between person and environment such that
interconnectivity is likely to become more pervasive, intrusive, and
‘everywhere’. In a seminal essay from 1996 computer engineers Mark
Weiser and John Seely Brown coined the term ‘ubiquitous computing’
and envisioned the ‘social impact of imbedded computers may be
analogous to ... electricity, which surges invisibly through the
walls of every home, office, and car’ (Weiser and Brown, 1996). True
to form, within a decade from this pronouncement computing
interfaces developed from fixed locations of access to increased
wireless connectivity. And it is predicted to become ever more
ubiquitous in a manner that will dissolve connectivity into embedded
environments (Greenfield, 2006). Greenfield considers this to be, in
one form or another, an inevitability, and refers to this ubiquitous
computing (ubicomp) paradigm as ‘everyware’: “Everyware is
information processing embedded in the objects and surfaces of
everyday life ... the extension of information–sensing, –processing,
and –networking capabilities to entire classes of things we‘ve never
before thought of as ‘technology’” [30].
This in turn is likely to trigger the ‘always–on’ surveillance of
people in both public life and in private affairs. This inevitably
blurs the boundaries between what is external and what is internal,
and leads to forms of surveillance that turn inwards and emanates
from the ‘self’ — an idea somewhat akin to that of sousveillance.
Sousveillance was coined by Mann (1998) who describes it as form of
‘reflectionism’ or as a ‘watchful vigilance from underneath’, which
is a form of inverse surveillance. Yet it more than inverses the
notion; it embellishes it with a self–reflective responsibility. For
Mann, reflectionism “holds up the mirror and asks the question: ‘Do
you like what you see?’” (Mann, et al., 2003). Also, in
this form, it requires that surveillance is enacted as a form of
self–control, as self–maintenance. It is the discipline of being
inwardly secure; firstly vigilant towards the self; secondly towards
other people/selves. This form of discipline seems to suggest that
there is little room for negligence when watchfulness is the order
of the day. Yet it also prompts the ‘user’ of sousveillance to be
active and participate in the surrounding environment. Sousveillance,
whilst it can encourage social responsibility, also suggests the
need for the person to be guarded against unwanted intrusions and
possible violations.
Mann went on
to transmit, in the mid ’90s, his daily life experiences for others
to experience and interact with. This created opportunities for
establishing a sousveillance network between Mann and his ‘readers’,
or rather social network. This participatory/social panopticon into
human–environment interactions was a forerunner to how ‘wearable
computing’ might one day emerge as a form of modern ‘intelligent
image processing’ (Mann, 2002). Mann’s performance constructs a
lived experience where the observation, recording, and dissemination
of civic events have shifted towards a social panopticon,
infiltrating daily physical encounters. It is a communal
watchfulness of civil responsibility merged with a technical mandate
for collective commentary, social analysis, and security of the
self. It is also an enactment of performance ethnography, at the
same time playful with notions of socialisation and breaching norms
(Mann, et al., 2003).
However, the
question this raises, I argue, is whether social domains might not
be in danger of becoming over–sensory realms, and what may emerge as
the most convenient and/or efficient strategy for coping with this.
Stross’s (2002) essay ‘The Panopticon Singularity’ considers this
trend in a dystopian fashion as ‘the emergence of a situation in
which human behaviour is deterministically governed by processes
outside human control’. Stross argues, reminiscent of Foucault, that
while the effectiveness of societal surveillance is dependent on the
number of people involved ‘systems of mechanised surveillance may
well increase in efficiency as a power function of the number of
deployed monitoring points’ (Stross, 2002). In other words, as more
people join the social panopticon, or sousveillant society, this
will have a knock–on effect that encourages more people to join the
securitisation of the self, rather than being left vulnerable and
un–sensored.
There is no
denying that such panopticon devices are proliferating — they are
carried around with us, increasingly as our own willing appendages.
The debates at present are largely centred on surveillance, as state
practices of pervasive and ubiquitous top–down monitoring of civil
space, rather than forms of self–monitoring, as in sousveillance.
Perhaps the next step will be further towards practices of immersive
surveillance and control, as indicated in this paper as a
psycho–civilized society.
The current
surge in research and development of wireless sensor networks is
likely to have a significant future impact upon not only how the
human body is configured in terms of medical applications but,
perhaps more importantly, how the human is cognitively configured in
terms of the information–rich environment. One of the scenarios of
ubiquitous, pervasive computing is to embed the environment with
non–invasive informational systems that merge physical–digital
infrastructures. Already much of our atmosphere is saturated with
informational flows in various spectrum bandwidths — we are
constantly walking through TV programs, mobile phone conversations,
and even military broadcasts. Yet we are not decoding these
transmissions. The transformation that these various scenarios in
this paper suggest is that the human body is becoming re–configured
— or re–wired — into a biological antenna. Not only will this
greatly facilitate our access onto the Net but will also re–form the
human presence, or identity, into a coded wavelength. A wavelength
that is more readily readable to various technologies. This may seem
far–fetched yet such a future may not be a far leap away.
Conclusion:
The future a quantum leap too far?
Socio–technical evolutionary trends predict a future that is wholly
immersed in and conversant with an integral informational–digitised
environment. Informational flows are envisioned to go beyond the
bits and bytes of present computing into the qubits (quantum bits)
and subatomic circuitry of quantum computing (Schwartz, et al.,
2006). Researchers into quantum computing are working with subatomic
spins for exponential and staggering computational capacity. A
possible future may look a little like this:
| Inside the
hatband is Sharon’s communication center and
intelligent assistant, which has scanned and sorted
the 500,000 e–mails she received overnight. By the
time she reaches the car, it has beamed the 10 most
urgent ones and her travel schedule to her visual
cortex. The text scrolls down in the bottom of her
field of vision ... . At the airport there is no
ticket check–in or security line. Sharon simply
walks through the revolving door, which scans her
for dangerous items, picks up her identity, confirms
her reservation, and delivers her gate number, all
in the space of a second. (Schwartz, et al.,
2006) |
Perhaps the
most common prediction prevalent amongst computer engineers is that
computers — pervasive and non–perceptible — will be seeded and woven
throughout the environment. They will be painted onto walls, on
furniture and objects, inside the body, ‘communicating with one
another constantly and requiring no more power than that which they
can glean from radio frequencies in the air’ (Schwartz, et al.,
2006). Quantum researcher and physicist Stuart Wolf anticipates that
the next two decades will usher in a type of communications he calls
‘network–enabled telepathy’. Despite the fanciful name the method
basically involves wearable devices (such as a ‘quantum headband’)
sharing identity and downloaded information with others in the
person’s social network; and all driven by the power of thought
alone. However, as Wolf points out, ‘it will probably take a new
generation raised to think of quantum headbands as normal for its
potential to be truly realized’ (Schwartz, et al., 2006).
Yet Wolf isn’t alone in his thinking.
Princeton
physicist Freeman Dyson has speculated upon the possibility of what
he calls radioneurology. Radioneurology refers to a
hypothetical future technology of observing neural processes inside
a brain by means of locally deployed radio transmitters (Dyson,
1997). For this to be feasible, speculates Dyson, requires a
technology to allow for the building and deployment of small
transmitters inside a living brain similar to integrated circuit
technology on a silicon chip:
| We know
that high–frequency electromagnetic signals can be
propagated through brain tissue for distances of the
order of centimeters. We know that microscopic
generators and receivers of electromagnetic
radiation are possible. We know that modern digital
data–handling technology is capable of recording and
analyzing the signals emerging from millions of tiny
transmitters simultaneaously. All that is lacking in
order to transform these possibilities into an
effective observational tool is the neurological
equivalent of integrated–circuit technology. [31] |
Given these
speculations, and what has been discussed in this paper, it is
likely that the major technology for the future is neurotechnology.
The information age that emerged out of post–war technologies, and
which has guided most of the technologies of the early twenty–first
century, has made it possible to collect, utilize, and transfer
information/data at unparalleled speeds. Communication, information,
and data have been flowing at exponential rates. However, they are
yet to merge into a systemic environment.
Neurotechnologies are set to change this with the rise of
‘nanobiochips’ and brain imaging and scanning technologies that will
eventually lower the cost of neurological techniques and analysis as
well as making the procedures efficient and profitable.
Neurotechnologies, combined with wireless sensors, may possibly
usher in a communications revolution greater than that caused by the
arrival of the transistor and the microchip. Zack Lynch, executive
director of the Neurotechnology Industry Organization (NIO), writes
that ‘When data from advanced biochips and brain imaging are
combined they will accelerate the development of neurotechnology,
the set of tools that can influence the human central nervous
system, especially the brain’ (Lynch, 2004). Although
neurotechnologies are likely to be put to therapeutic and medical
uses, such as for improving emotional stability and mental clarity,
they also open opportunities for intrusive strategies of control and
manipulation.
Part of this
paper has been focused on the dangers of an increasingly wireless
world. These dangers may include the potential for invasive
technologies, based upon transmitted/received signals and
wavelengths, to shift social order towards a psycho–civilized
society. By psycho–civilised I mean a society that manages and
controls social behaviour predominantly through non–obvious methods
of psychological manipulations, yet at a level far beyond that of
the ‘normalised’ social manipulations of propaganda and social
institutions. What I refer to are the technologised methods of
psychological interference and privacy intrusions in the manner of
creating a docile and constrained society. And here this brings us
back to the problematics involved in opening a Pandora’s box.
In this
paper I have asked whether innovations in wireless and neuro–technologies
are not in danger of shifting human behaviour towards a psycho–civilised
society, where greater emphasis is placed upon forms of social
control and pre–emptive strategies. What are the moral and ethical
implications of using wireless scanning surveillance technologies
for evaluating pre–emptive behaviour based on thoughts and
intentions alone? Is this not a dangerous path towards psycho–terrorising
the social public? As Thomas (1998) reminds us, the mind has no
firewall, and is thus vulnerable to viruses, Trojan horses, and
spam. It is also vulnerable to hackers, cyber–terrorists, and state
surveillance. Whilst this may sound a little too far out, they are
reasonable questions to ask if technologies are racing ahead of us
in order to better get into our heads.
Becoming
wireless also means becoming increasingly immersed within an
information–saturated environment. From the evidence of present
trends and developments it seems likely that a greater systemic
interconnectedness and interdependence is being formed between
human–object–environment facilitated through and by information
flows. This may herald the coming of a ‘wonderful wireless world’,
yet it may also signal unforeseen dangers in protection, privacy,
and security of the human biological body within these new
relationships. It is the suggestion of this paper that such issues
and concerns need to become more public, visible, and open; the very
opposite of these technologies.

Kingsley
Dennis is a Research Associate in the Centre for Mobilities Research
(CeMoRe) based at the Sociology Department at Lancaster University,
U.K. His doctoral work focused on complexity theory and information
communication technologies. Post–doctoral research now involves
examining physical–digital convergences and how these might impact
upon social processes. He is concerned with the digital rendition of
identity and the implications of surveillance technologies.
Web:
http://www.kingsleydennis.com
Blog:
http://www.new-mobilities.co.uk
E–mail: Kingsley [at] kingsleydennis [dot] co [dot] uk
Notes
1.
Dolman, 2002, p. 41.
2.
O’Connor, 1993, p. 35.
3.
Ibid.
4.
See
http://www.dia.mil/publicaffairs/Foia/foia.htm
for list of
declassified reports, accessed 11 November 2007.
5.
LaMothe, 1972, p. 18.
6.
Horgan, 2005, p. 67.
7.
Horgan, 2005, p. 70.
8.
Thomas, 1998, p. 84.
9.
Ibid.
10.
Ibid.
11.
Thomas, 1998, p. 85.
12.
Thomas, 1998, p. 86.
13.
Simpson, 1994, p. 3.
14.
Thomas, 1998, p. 87.
15.
Thomas, 1998, p. 89.
16.
Welsh, 1998, p. 37.
17.
Part of ongoing research at the QinetiQ Group — see
http://www.qinetiq.com/.
18.
See
http://crunchgear.com/2007/03/08/
emotiv-project-epoc-sensory-gaming-for-the-masses/,
accessed 15 January 2008.
19.
http://emotiv.com/3_0/pr/pr022607a.htm,
accessed 5 November 2007.
20.
http://emotiv.com/3_0/pr/pr022607a.htm,
accessed 5 November 2007.
21.
See
http://www.neurosky.com/,
accessed 5 November 2007.
22.
http://www.smartbraingames.com/,
accessed 5 November 2007.
23.
For patent, see
http://www.google.com/patents?vid=USPAT6754472&id=30YSAAAAEBAJ&dq=6,754,472.
24.
See Google patents
http://www.google.com/patents?vid=USPAT4395600&id=V_ItAAAAEBAJ&dq=4,395,600.
25.
See Google patents
http://www.google.com/patents?vid=USPAT5507291&id=940lAAAAEBAJ&dq=5,507,291.
26.
John 8:1–9.
27.
See
http://wearcam.org/mann.html,
accessed 17 January 2008.
28.
See also BBC Report —
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/6108496.stm
accessed 5 November
2007. For general information see the journal Surveillance and
Society, at
http://www.surveillance-and-society.org/index.htm,
accessed 5 November 2007.
29.
There are up to 4.2m CCTV cameras in Britain — about one for every
14 people — more than other industrialised Western states.
30.
Greenfield, 2006, p. 18.
31.
Dyson, 1997, pp. 133–134.
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