This is pretty cool! Even though it isn't perfect now, maybe it can be used in the future to interrogate criminals and help amnesiacs recover their memory.
i agree with howard, it could be used in the future. but i don't think the title was true to the article.i didn't see how it was "mind reading," it was more recolection of memory through eye movement. i wonder if this has anything to do with why people close their eyes really tightly when they are trying to remember something.
Although this sound like pseudoscience at first, once they explain the science(which I partially didn't get), it sounds acceptable. I agree with Lily, it's not really mind reading, as they say in the title.
This trchnique is a great skill if it can be proven that it works it could help us interrogate criminals or to understand people that are with understanding
I agree with Lily and anyone else that agreed with her about it not really being "mind reading". I think it was just remembering your past through eye movement. Your past can tell a lot about the person you are today, so it could be helpful to find out about people you don't really understand. By using this technique, you could better understand the way people think and act.
I thought that this was a really cool article. I agree with howard too, it can be used in the future also for amnesiacs. I thought that it was pretty cool that they used someone's eyes to see their past.
I really liked this article, and I thought it was fascinating that by recording eye movement, we can figure out someone's past. Howard, I really liked what you said about how it could possibly be used to find criminals. That would be interesting, as people couldn't lie about a crime because they could "see it in their eyes". People are always saying that when you lie, people can see it in your eyes. Now, it's literal!
7 comments:
This is pretty cool! Even though it isn't perfect now, maybe it can be used in the future to interrogate criminals and help amnesiacs recover their memory.
i agree with howard, it could be used in the future. but i don't think the title was true to the article.i didn't see how it was "mind reading," it was more recolection of memory through eye movement. i wonder if this has anything to do with why people close their eyes really tightly when they are trying to remember something.
Although this sound like pseudoscience at first, once they explain the science(which I partially didn't get), it sounds acceptable. I agree with Lily, it's not really mind reading, as they say in the title.
This trchnique is a great skill if it can be proven that it works it could help us interrogate criminals or to understand people that are with understanding
I agree with Lily and anyone else that agreed with her about it not really being "mind reading". I think it was just remembering your past through eye movement. Your past can tell a lot about the person you are today, so it could be helpful to find out about people you don't really understand. By using this technique, you could better understand the way people think and act.
I thought that this was a really cool article. I agree with howard too, it can be used in the future also for amnesiacs. I thought that it was pretty cool that they used someone's eyes to see their past.
I really liked this article, and I thought it was fascinating that by recording eye movement, we can figure out someone's past. Howard, I really liked what you said about how it could possibly be used to find criminals. That would be interesting, as people couldn't lie about a crime because they could "see it in their eyes". People are always saying that when you lie, people can see it in your eyes. Now, it's literal!
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