Book a Demo!
CoCalc Logo Icon
StoreFeaturesDocsShareSupportNewsAboutPoliciesSign UpSign In
Download
29547 views
1
2
3
4
5
6
Functional magnetic resonance imaging—fMRI—opens a window onto the brain at work. By
7
tracking changes in cerebral blood flow as a subject performs a mental task, fMRI shows
8
which brain regions “light up” when making a movement, thinking of a loved one, or telling
9
a lie. Its ability to reveal function, not merely structure, distinguishes fMRI from static
10
neuroimaging techniques such as CT scanning, and its capacity to highlight the neural
11
substrates of decisions, emotions, and deceptions has propelled fMRI into the popular
12
consciousness. Discussions of the future of fMRI have conjured visions of mind-reading
13
devices used everywhere from the front door at the airport terminal to the back room of the
14
corporate personnel office. At least one “neuromarketing” research firm is already trying
15
to use fMRI to probe what consumers “really” think about their clients' products.
16
But will fMRI's utility in the real world ever match the power we currently imagine for
17
it? Is fMRI likely to leave the clinic for widespread use in the courtroom or the
18
boardroom? Are there neuroethical nightmares just around the corner? Or are all these vivid
19
specters really just idle speculations that will never come to pass?
20
21
22
150,000 Grains of Rice
23
To understand the potential, and the limitations, of fMRI, it's helpful to know how the
24
technique works. The heart of the apparatus is a large donut-shaped magnet that senses
25
changes in the electromagnetic field of any material placed in its center, in
26
particular—when a head is scanned—the blood as it flows through the brain. When a region of
27
the brain is activated, it receives an increased flow of oxygenated blood (the extremely
28
rapid redirection of blood within the active brain is one of the underappreciated wonders
29
supporting neural activity). This influx of oxygenated blood alters the strength of the
30
local magnetic field in proportion to the increase in flow, which is detected and recorded
31
by the imaging machinery.
32
The resolution of the best fMRI machines—the smallest “volume picture element,” or
33
voxel, they can distinguish and make an image of—is currently about 1.5 mm ×1.5 mm × 4 mm,
34
the size of a grain of rice. There are approximately 150,000 of these little volumes in the
35
typical brain, and the immense computers hooked up to the scanners record and integrate
36
signals from all of them. In a typical experiment, a subject, lying still with his head
37
surrounded by the magnet, does nothing for thirty seconds, then performs some task for
38
thirty seconds, then lies still for thirty seconds. For each voxel, the signal during the
39
task is compared to the signal at rest; those areas of the brain with stronger signals
40
during the task are presumed to be processing the information that underlies the
41
performance of the task (Figure 1). According to Joy Hirsch, Director of the Functional
42
Magnetic Resonance Imaging Research Center at Columbia University, fMRI represents a
43
“quantum leap” over any previous technology for imaging the brain. “It enables us for the
44
first time to probe the workings of a normal human brain,” she says. “It's really opening
45
the black box.”
46
The first caveat about fMRI's imaging power, though, and one that every neuroimager
47
stresses, is that a voxel is a long way from a neuron. There are an estimated 100 billion
48
neurons, so at best, an fMRI is signaling blood flow changes associated with the increased
49
activity of tens of thousands of neurons. As a result, says Hirsch, fMRI “falls short when
50
we want to ask about more detailed brain processes. We're not learning that much about how
51
neurons are doing local computing.” While resolution will improve over time, it seems
52
unlikely that fMRI will ever detect the activity of individual neurons, and so its ability
53
to dissect the “fine structure” of thought is inherently limited. (Even should it become
54
possible to detect and integrate the workings of every neuron in the brain, it would still
55
be far from clear how neuronal firing patterns translate into coherent, perceived thoughts,
56
and this gap is unlikely to be bridged by any advance in imaging technology alone.)
57
These limitations have not prevented fMRI researchers from making some major discoveries
58
about brain function, however. Hirsch, for instance, showed in one study that minimally
59
conscious individuals still process human speech, and in another, that those who become
60
bilingual as young children employ overlapping language areas in the cerebral cortex, while
61
those who learn a second language later in life use a different area for the second
62
language. The key strength of fMRI, she says, is that it provides the ability to test these
63
kinds of hypotheses about structure–function relationships in the normal brain.
64
65
66
All Sizes Do Not Fit One
67
But the hypotheses that can be tested and the conclusions that can be drawn are still
68
largely about group averages, not about the functionings of individual brains, and therein
69
lies a second major caveat about the use of fMRI beyond the clinic. John Gabrieli,
70
Associate Professor of Psychology at Stanford University, has shown that distinct
71
activation patterns in the brains of dyslexic children normalize as they improve their
72
reading skills (Figure 2). It seems like a small leap from there to including an fMRI as
73
part of the workup for a schoolchild struggling in the classroom. But, Gabrieli cautions,
74
that small leap in fact traverses a huge chasm, on one side of which is the group data from
75
which conclusions are drawn in studies, and on the other side, the application of these
76
conclusions to the individual child. “At the moment, fMRI would be among the most useless
77
things to do. We would love to get it to the point that it would be useful [on an
78
individual basis],” he says, but it's not there yet. “There is no single-subject
79
reliability,” says Gabrieli. “Where we are now, I'm not aware of any applications for which
80
it would be responsible to interpret an individual scan [based on group data].”
81
There are similar limitations to most other applications of fMRI—while conclusions can
82
be made about aggregated data, individual scans are for the most part too hard to
83
interpret. There is not yet any real understanding of how brain patterns change over time
84
in an individual, or how interindividual differences should be interpreted in relation to
85
the conclusions that are valid for groups. This makes fMRI an unlikely tool for job
86
screening, for instance. While one study has shown a brain signature in a group of white
87
people that is associated with racial bias, denying a particular individual a job on the
88
basis of such a scan would likely lead straight to a lawsuit, with experts debating whether
89
90
this scan in
91
this individual on
92
this day does or doesn't reflect his underlying racial attitudes.
93
On the other hand, Hirsch has used individual scans to help locate a patient's language
94
structures that must be spared during neurosurgery. “If you are a neurosurgeon planning a
95
resection, you don't want an average brain at all. Millimeters matter.” But her success is
96
precisely because she is not using group data to make inferences about the individual—she
97
is not leaping over the chasm, but instead is toiling entirely on the other side of it.
98
“The goal is personalized medicine,” she says.
99
100
101
A Little Guilty Knowledge Is a Dangerous Thing
102
Even this kind of personalized approach with fMRI is fraught with problems when
103
researchers attempt to apply it outside the clinic, because of limitations in the
104
technology itself. One researcher with firsthand knowledge of these problems is Daniel
105
Langleben, Assistant Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania School of
106
Medicine. In 2002, Langleben showed that when subjects were hiding information in an
107
attempt to deceive (so-called guilty knowledge), they had intense activity in five distinct
108
brain areas not seen when they were telling the truth. In effect, Langleben used the fMRI
109
as a lie detector. It is potentially even more powerful than a standard polygraph test, he
110
says, because there are thousands of brain regions which can be scanned for
111
deception-triggered variation, versus only three variables—skin conductance, respiration,
112
and blood pressure—used in the standard polygraph. Not surprisingly, Langleben got a lot of
113
press after he announced his results, and his experiment led directly to speculation that
114
we might eventually see fMRIs installed at airports, scanning the brains of would-be
115
terrorists trying to deceive security screeners, or in courtrooms, catching perjurers
116
red-handed (or perhaps red–anterior-cingulate-gyrused?).
117
Langleben is enthusiastic about the potential for an fMRI-based lie detector, and has
118
even applied to the Department of Justice for a grant to develop the technology (they
119
turned him down, saying it was too expensive). But he is also clear about how difficult it
120
will be to get one that really works outside the highly structured confines of the research
121
lab. “We are a long way from making a working polygraph,” he says. Even with a “Manhattan
122
Project” type effort, he speculates it would take at least ten years. “There are still
123
essential discoveries to make along the way,” he says, “and there's a good chance it would
124
end in total failure.” It's not just a matter of developing the imaging technology, he
125
stresses—“we'll need fundamental developments in semantics, too.” This is because “a lot
126
still depends on how you ask the question”—the subtlest of differences can dramatically
127
shift which areas of the brain respond. Given the sensitivity of the fMRI result to such
128
seemingly minor perturbations, it's hard to imagine it could be reliably adapted to the
129
hurly-burly of an airport security checkpoint.
130
Even well-performed scans done in topnotch clinics may not easily find their way into
131
the courtroom. Perhaps the least likely use of fMRI is in determining if a defendant is
132
telling the truth, according to Hank Greely, Professor of Law at Stanford Law School, since
133
compelling someone on trial to submit to an fMRI could be seen as a violation of the Fifth
134
Amendment right against self incrimination, just as giving spoken testimony against oneself
135
is. On the other hand, says Greely, DNA samples and fingerprints can be compelled—whether a
136
brain scan is more like testifying or more like submitting to a blood test is an open
137
question. Still, for the moment, scanning under duress simply isn't feasible, since all you
138
have to do to ruin a good scan is move your head. Motion-correcting algorithms can be used,
139
but they are nowhere near advanced enough to correct for large-scale movements by an
140
unwilling subject. It's much more likely that an fMRI of a willing defendant would be
141
introduced to convince the jury he is telling the truth, or performed before trial to rule
142
out an innocent suspect. While to Greely's knowledge fMRI evidence hasn't yet been used in
143
court, “it's certain to be tried,” and the barrier to its admission will fall as both the
144
reliability and the ease of administration increase. “The easier, the cheaper, the more
145
pleasant a technique is, the more likely it is to be used in the legal system.”
146
Other forensic uses of fMRI are likely to arrive sooner rather than later. Could scans
147
showing diminished impulse control—a function controlled by several regions of the brain,
148
including the striatum and the ventromedial prefrontal cortex—be used to support more
149
lenient sentencing, or even acquit a defendant, because he couldn't control his violent
150
impulses? Or alternatively, will those same scans be used to argue for harsher sentences,
151
since the defendant is clearly “hardwired” to commit similar crimes again? Courts already
152
consider other factors, such as a history of child abuse, in an attempt to more fully
153
understand the psychological state of the defendant. Will brain scans be seen as the
154
ultimate “objective” look into the mind of the person on trial?
155
Deciding all these issues of admissibility will be judges who will need to weigh
156
competing claims from lawyers with competing interests, backed up by expert witnesses with
157
competing theories. Here, the desire to apply the science may rush ahead of its
158
demonstrated validity.
159
Langleben, for one, doesn't think fMRI will be legitimately ready for the courtroom for
160
a long time. On the other hand, he says, “if you want to abuse this technique and claim
161
that it works, you can create tests that will produce results—I can see how it could be
162
done. We know enough to rig it.” But still, he says, “we have all the tools we need to
163
prevent this—there are enough people who are sufficiently honest [who would counter the
164
premature use of fMRI in these contexts].”
165
For now, at least, given the problems inherent in current fMRI technology, the
166
neuroethical nightmare scenarios of widespread brain scanning seem unlikely to come to
167
pass, at least until radical advances make it far cheaper, much less invasive, far less
168
sensitive to subtle perturbations, and with a much more robust ability to legitimately
169
extrapolate from a finding about a group to a prediction about an individual. Where fMRI is
170
concerned, “a penny for your thoughts” is currently more like “a million pennies for a
171
group-averaged hemodynamic response to highly constrained stimuli under entirely artificial
172
conditions.”
173
In light of this, bioethical concerns about fMRI applications should perhaps be viewed
174
not as predictions of a certain future but rather as worstcase scenarios, a reminder of
175
what we want to avoid. “It's a funny thing about the bioethics field,” says Greely. “The
176
general approach is to look for bad news.”
177
While many of these “worst cases” seem highly unlikely to come to pass, Judy Illes, of
178
the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, thinks some action is warranted now, if only to
179
generate a better understanding of the ethical dimensions of fMRI research. She notes that
180
“bioethicists are often viewed as the ethics police,” but she doesn't see regulations as
181
the right path to shape the future uses of fMRI. Instead, she thinks a coalition of
182
involved parties—scientists, lawyers, ethicists, politicians—should work together to
183
develop guidelines that all will find acceptable. “I'm not in the business of stopping
184
anything.”
185
What everyone apparently already agrees on is the need for carefully designed
186
experiments and cautious interpretation of the data. “A huge message in imaging is that you
187
really have to look at the experimental setup at the common-sense level,” says Gabrieli,
188
and avoid the tendency to “pick the most dramatic interpretation.” “The public needs to be
189
reminded of the limitations of these findings,” agrees Hirsch. And as Langleben puts it,
190
expressing his skepticism that there will ever be a one-size-fits-all, foolproof fMRI mind
191
reader: “I don't think we'll ever be able to be stupid about it.”
192
193
194
195
196