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/technology
By Pam Benson
CNN
BOSTON,
Massachusetts (CNN) -- The days of being able to walk through
airport security checkpoints while wearing shoes and a jacket could
return if an experimental program proves successful, some Department of
Homeland Security officials say.
Project officials hope various sensors, such as
this one that tracks eye movement, can help security screeners.
The Homeland Security-funded project is Future Attribute Screening
Technology, or FAST. Instead of focusing on whether you have hidden
explosives or whether you're carrying a weapon, sensors and cameras
located at security checkpoints would measure the natural signals coming
from your body -- your heart rate, breathing, eye movement, body
temperature and fidgeting.
Those physiological signs, measured together, will
indicate whether you might have the desire or intent to do harm, project
manager Robert Burns said.
"There's been a large field of research that ties your physical
reactions to your mental state, your emotional state. We're looking for
those signals that your body gives off naturally," Burns said.
Burns said the technology will pick up cues that
may not be observed by a human and help security personnel decide more
quickly whether to send someone to secondary screening for questioning.
FAST could be used wherever there are special
security concerns, including stadiums, convention centers, federal
buildings, mass transit centers and airports.
Some critics question the viability of the project, saying it's
pie-in-the-sky science fiction. Civil libertarians also charge it's an
invasion of privacy.
Researchers demonstrated FAST to reporters last
month at the Charles Stark Draper Laboratory in Boston.
Actors walked into a room, where the various
sensors measured their responses to a series of questions from a
screener. The questions included, "Is this the month of September?" and
"Do you plan to detonate an explosive?" Their responses were noted on
individual graphs that indicated whether their physiological cues fell
within normal ranges.
It's taken about $20 million to develop the technology. All but one of
the sensors is commercially available.
One is a thermal imaging device that measures the
temperature of a face. A screener would look for temperature changes --
a possible stress response -- as a person is asked questions.
Another device, an eye tracker, follows a person's
gaze, checks the amount of blinking and measures pupil dilation.
Two of the machines track heart and respiratory rates. They also measure
the interval between heartbeats and how deeply one inhales.
And there is an improvised fidgeting monitor.
Researchers took a Wii balance board -- a device people stand on to
interact with certain Nintendo Wii video games -- and altered it to show
how someone's weight shifts. Studies are now under way to determine
whether there is a level of fidgeting that would suggest the need for
secondary screening. A checkpoint screener would not look at the
results individually, but would consider them together when deciding
whether someone should be sent for questioning, Burns said.
And a screener wouldn't be targeting just people with elevated levels.
"We're going to look for the elevation, but we're
also going to look for the absence of signals, which is just as
indicative of being something that has to be resolved," Burns said.
FAST researchers are encouraged by the results so
far. One of the researchers, Daniel Martin, says as each succeeding
study becomes more real, the program is "doing significantly better than
chance."
Critics say that is not good enough. "I
haven't seen any research that shows that those measures from the
autonomic nervous system ... measuring blood pressure, measuring
breathing, measuring heat on the face, are at all related to intent,"
said Stephen Fienberg, professor of statistics and social sciences at
Carnegie Mellon University.
Fienberg, who participated in a government study
critical of the use of polygraphs, said he worries that a lot of money
is being spent on a program that in the end will show "the emperor has
no clothes."
Civil liberties groups maintain this screening
technology is an invasion of privacy.
"Nobody has the right to look at my intimate bodily functions, my
breathing, my perspiration rate, my heart rate, from afar," said Joe
Stanley of the ACLU.
Stanley says government officials need to focus on
what has worked in the past.
"They need to use old-fashioned, shoe-leather law enforcement
investigative techniques, chase down known evidence, known suspects and
get out there and do a good, competent basic job in investigating
terrorist groups," he said. Stanley added the notion that
terrorists "can be picked out with this kind of pseudo technological
approach ... is very naive."
Burns denied the project is a violation of
privacy. "We're looking at signals you give off naturally. We're
not asking for any personal information. We're not asking anything about
you," he said. Burns acknowledges the project has a long way to go, but
he insists it is valid research that's headed in the right direction. He
believes their theory is backed by "a vast plethora of research over the
past 40 years."
Researchers hope to have the project ready for
field testing in 2011. Burns' goal is to have a system within five years
that is "minimized and unobtrusive."
People would go through security quicker, Burns
said, and "you may keep your shoes on, you don't need to take your
jacket off and please keep your bottle of water."
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