“I didn’t do it!” Tell it to an MRI.

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Magnetic Resonance Imaging, or MRI, is not a truth serum.

But researchers are saying it’s a top notch lie detector that far surpasses the polygraph in determining whether or not a person is lying.

The polygraph just measures physiological responses to stress - your pulse rate, sweating, irregular breathing - and has largely been discredited as a scientific tool.

The MRI goes straight to the source.

The MRI measures what’s happening in your brain. Researchers are using what’s called functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), to watch localized brain activity, to look inside heads and see what your brain does when it lies.

According to Dr. K. Luan Phan, a psychiatrist at the University of Chicago, lying causes changes in your brain that you can see with a functional MRI because lying makes your brain work harder in the pre-frontal cortex, where reasoning occurs.

Guess who’s interested?

MRI lie-detection has already gone commercial. A California company, No Lie MRI says that, for a price (around $10,000), it can identify lies with 90% accuracy. Its website claims that it “provides unbiased methods for the detection of deception and other information stored in the brain,” and that their MRI technology “represents the first and only direct measure of truth verification and lie detection in human history!”

Meanwhile, federal dollars are pouring into this research. According to an article in The Scientist, since September 11, 2001, grants from US agencies, including the Departments of Defense and Homeland Security, have “burst open the field.” Jon Gabrieli’s group at Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology has funding from the Central Intelligence Agency. No Lie MRI’s technology is based on the results of Daniel Langleben’s research at the University of Pennsylvania, which was partially funded by the Department of Defense.

How to trick an MRI

Researchers say the only way to trick the MRI is to convince yourself you’re telling the truth. If you really believe something is true, your brain won’t register enough changes to be conclusive.

We all know there are many different kinds of lying: “I love your haircut!” versus “I found the money in a trash heap.” Is telling the truth about whether a card is red or black the same as telling the truth about whether you are a terrorist? So far, researchers have had only willing subjects.

Is this the ultimate invasion of our privacy? Or is it a great new way to identify terrorists and serial killers?

4 Responses to “"I didn't do it!" Tell it to an MRI.”


  1. 1 Gretchie May 24th, 2007 at 11:56 am

    So how long do they leave you in a MRI chamber to ask you questions? That can’t be healthy. And all criminals and terrorists have to do is believe their own lies? That shouldn’t be such a stretch.

  2. 2 eimster May 24th, 2007 at 12:04 pm

    Plus MRI’s are super expensive. There won’t be an MRI in every police station anytime soon.

  3. 3 Tom May 29th, 2007 at 5:34 pm

    A Utah Zone Polygraph Examination has approximately a 92% accuracy rate and anAFMGQT has approximately 90% accuracy rate. The costs are only $395 to $1700, depending on the issues. In the hands of an experienced Polygraph Examiner, this is probably still the most reliable method and much, much, cheaper.

  4. 4 hdaibpwril Jun 18th, 2007 at 4:24 am

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