Wired
Mark Twain once tried to distinguish between the storyteller’s art
and tales that a machine could generate. He observed that stringing
“incongruities and absurdities together in a wandering and sometimes
purposeless way, and seem innocently unaware that they are absurdities,”
was the province of the American storyteller. A machine might imitate simple formulas behind yarns, but never quite master them.
The Pentagon’s freewheeling research arm is hoping to prove Twain
wrong. Darpa is asking scientists to “take narratives and make them
quantitatively analyzable in a rigorous, transparent and repeatable
fashion.” The idea is to detect terrorists who have been indoctrinated
by propaganda. Then, the Pentagon can respond with some messages of its
own.
The program is called “Narrative Networks.”
By understanding how stories have shaped your mind, the Pentagon hopes
to sniff out who has fallen prey to dangerous ideas, a neuroscience
researcher involved in the project tells Danger Room. With this
knowledge, the military can also target groups vulnerable to terrorists’
recruiting tactics with its own counter-messaging.
“Stories are important in security contexts,” Darpa said in an Oct. 7 solicitation
for research proposals. Stories “change the course of insurgencies,
frame negotiations, play a role in political radicalization, influence
the methods and goals of violent social movements.” The desire to study
narratives has been simmering for a while in the Defense Department. A Darpa workshop in April to discuss the “neurobiology of narratives” added momentum to this project.
In the first 18-month phase of the program, the Pentagon wants
researchers to study how stories infiltrate social networks and alter
our brain circuits. One of the stipulated research goals: to “explore
the function narratives serve in the process of political
radicalization and how they can influence a person or group’s choice of
means (such as indiscriminant violence) to achieve political ends.”
Once scientists have perfected the science of how stories affect our
neurochemistry, they will develop tools to “detect narrative influence.”
These tools will enable “prevention of negative behavioral outcomes …
and generation of positive behavioral outcomes, such as building
trust.” In other words, the tools will be used to detect who’s been
controlled by subversive ideologies, better allowing the military to
drown out that message and win people onto their side.
“The government is already trying to control the message, so why not
have the science to do it in a systematic way?” said the researcher
familiar with the project.
When the project enters into a second 18-month phase, it’ll use the
research gathered to build “optimized prototype technologies in the form
of documents, software, hardware and devices.” What will these be?
Existing technology can carry out micro-facial feature analysis, and
measure the dilation of blood vessels and eye pupils. MRI machines can
determine which parts of your brain is lighting up when it responds to
stories. Darpa wants to do even better.
In fact, it’s calling for devices that detect the influence of
stories in unseen ways. “Efforts that rely solely on
standoff/non-invasive/non-detectable sensors are highly encouraged,” the
solicitation reads.
Forget lie detectors; invisible propaganda-detectors are the future.
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