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GRINDER SUMMARY
Brain Fingerprinting
Laboratories
Lawrence A. Farwell, PhD
Forensic Report - Prepared for
Sheriff Robert Dawson' Macon County, MO
Brain Fingerprinting Test of
James B. Grinder,
Suspect in the Rape and Murder
of Julie Helton
August 5, 1999
The author is grateful to Supervisory Special Agent Drew Richardson, PhD
FBI Laboratory, Quantico, VA for assistance in developing the stimuli for the test on the Helton
murder.
"Satyam eva jayate - Truth alone triumphs."
Dr. Larry Farwell Conducts a Brain Fingerprinting Test on J. B.
Grinder
The test identified Grinder as the murderer of Julie Helton.

1. Executive Summary
1.1.1 A
patented new technique of proven accuracy in US government tests
Dr. Lawrence A. Farwell has invented, developed, proven, and patented
the technique of Brain Fingerprinting, a new computer-based technology to identify
the perpetrator of a crime accurately and scientifically by measuring brain-wave responses
to crime-relevant words or pictures presented on a computer screen. Brain Fingerprinting
has proven 100% accurate in over 120 tests, including tests on FBI agents,
tests for a US intelligence agency and for the US Navy, and tests on real-life situations
including actual crimes.
1.1.2
Scientific detection of the record of the crime in the perpetrators brain
Brain Fingerprinting is based on the principle that the brain
is central to all human acts. In a criminal act, there may or may not be many kinds of
peripheral evidence, but the brain is always there, planning, executing, and recording the
crime. The fundamental difference between a perpetrator and a falsely accused, innocent
person is that the perpetrator, having committed the crime, has the details of the crime
stored in his brain, and the innocent suspect does not. This is what Brain Fingerprinting
detects scientifically.
1.1.3
Matching evidence from a crime scene with evidence on the perpetrator
Brain Fingerprinting matches evidence from a crime scene with
evidence stored in the brain of the perpetrator, similarly to the way conventional
fingerprinting matches fingerprints at the crime scene with the fingers of the
perpetrator, and DNA fingerprinting matches biological samples from the crime scene with
the DNA in the body of the perpetrator.
1.1.4
How Brain Fingerprinting works
Brain Fingerprinting works as follows. Words or pictures
relevant to a crime are flashed on a computer screen, along with other, irrelevant words
or pictures. Electrical brain responses are measured non-invasively through a patented
headband equipped with sensors. Dr. Farwell has discovered that a specific brain-wave
response called a MERMER (memory and encoding related multifaceted electroencephalographic
response) is elicited when the brain processes noteworthy information it recognizes. Thus,
when details of the crime that only the perpetrator would know are presented, a MERMER is
emitted by the brain of a perpetrator, but not by the brain of an innocent suspect. In
Brain Fingerprinting, a computer analyzes the brain response to detect the MERMER,
and thus determines scientifically whether or not the specific crime-relevant information
is stored in the brain of the suspect.
1.1.5 Comparison with other
technologies
Conventional fingerprinting and DNA match physical evidence from a
crime scene with evidence on the person of the perpetrator. Similarly, Brain
Fingerprinting matches informational evidence from the crime scene with evidence stored in
the brain. Fingerprints and DNA are available in only 1% of crimes. The brain and the
evidence recorded in it are always there.
This has nothing to do with lie detection. Rather, it is a scientific
way to determine if someone has committed a specific crime. No questions are asked and no
answers are given during Brain Fingerprinting. As with DNA and fingerprints, the
results are the same whether the person has lied or told the truth at any time.
1.1.6 Background of the James B. Grinder case
On January 8, 1984 Julie Helton was reported missing in Macon, MO.
Three days later her badly beaten body was found near a railroad track near Macon. She had
been raped and stabbed in the neck.
James B. Grinder is the primary suspect in the case. Over the fifteen
years since the crime, he had given several different, contradictory accounts of the
crime. Some accounts involved his participation, and some did not. Some involved
participation by several other individuals. Grinder's accounts contradicted both physical
evidence and the statements of an alleged witness. The various accounts of Grinder and
several others who were allegedly involved all had proven to be unreliable as well as
contradictory. Macon County Sheriff Robert Dawson asked Dr. Farwell to use Brain
Fingerprinting to determine scientifically whether or not Grinder was the perpetrator of
the crime.
1.1.7 The Brain Fingerprinting test on J.B. Grinder
On August 5, 1999, Dr. Larry Farwell tested James B. Grinder at the
Macon County Sheriffs Office in Macon, MO. Dr. Farwell tested Grinders brain
for the presence of absence of information that would identify him as the perpetrator of
the Helton rape and murder.
FBI Supervisory Special Agent Drew Richardson, PhD assisted Dr. Farwell
in developing the specific test on the Helton rape/murder. Macon County Sheriff Robert
Dawson, Chief Deputy Charles Muldoon, and Randy King of the Missouri Highway Patrol
provided Dr. Farwell with the information on the case for use in developing the test.
Results of the Brain Fingerprinting test on
J.B. Grinder
The determination of Brain Fingerprinting was "Information
Present," with a statistical confidence of 99.9%. This means that J.B. Grinders
brain contained information identifying him as the perpetrator of the Helton rape and
murder, with a high statistical confidence for that determination.
2. Table of Contents
Photo: Dr. Larry Farwell Conducts a Brain Fingerprinting Test on J. B. Grinder
*
1. Executive Summary
*
1.1.1 A patented new technique of proven accuracy in US
government tests *
1.1.2 Scientific detection of the record of the crime in
the perpetrators brain
*
1.1.3 Matching evidence from a crime scene with evidence on
the perpetrator *
1.1.4 How Brain Fingerprinting works *
1.1.5 Comparison with other technologies *
1.1.6 Background of the James B. Grinder case *
1.1.7 The Brain Fingerprinting test on J.B. Grinder *
1.1.7 Results of the Brain Fingerprinting test on
J.B. Grinder *
2. Table of Contents
*
3. Brain Fingerprinting: Overview of the Technology *
3.1 The Brain Fingerprinting Test
*
3.2 Previous Record of 100% Accuracy
*
3.3 Brain Fingerprinting in Law Enforcement. *
3.4 Criminal Evidence in the Brain of the Perpetrator. *
3.5 Description of Brain Fingerprinting *
3.5.1 Matching evidence at the crime scene with evidence in
the brain *
3.5.2 Four phases of Brain Fingerprinting *
4. A Brief Historical Perspective
*
4.1 Need for New Scientific Techniques to Identify Perpetrators. *
4.2 The discovery of the brain MERMER *
4.3 Brain Central to Crime and Criminal Investigations *
5. Scientific Procedure, Research, and Applications
*
5.1 Informational Evidence Detection. *
5.2 The Brain MERMER
*
5.3 Scientific Procedure
*
5.4 Computer Controlled
*
5.5 Scientific Experiments, Field Tests, and Criminal Cases *
5.5.1 Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) studies *
5.5.2 US intelligence agency studies *
5.5.3 US Navy study
*
5.5.4 Field tests and criminal investigations *
5.5.5 Results of previous research, field tests, and
investigations *
6. Dr. Farwells Brain Fingerprinting Test on J B Grinder *
6.1 Background of the James B. Grinder case *
6.2 Testing procedure
*
6.3 Results of the Brain Fingerprinting test on J.B. Grinder
7. Appendix 2 J.B. Grinders Brain-Wave Responses *
3. Brain Fingerprinting:
Overview of the Technology
-
The Brain Fingerprinting Test
During the Brain Fingerprinting test, J.B. Grinder wore a headband
equipped with sensors and connected to an electroencephalograph (EEG) amplifier, which in
turn fed the brain-wave data into a computer for analysis. He viewed phrases flashed
briefly on a computer screen. Some of the phrases were relevant to the Helton murder;
others were irrelevant phrases that would be equally plausible crime-related items for an
innocent subject.
The Brain Fingerprinting system analyzed Grinders brain
responses to determine the presence or absence of a MERMER (memory and encoding related
multifaceted electroencephalographic response) in response to the crime-relevant stimuli.
The presence of a MERMER indicates that the subject recognizes these stimuli as
significant, due to the fact that his brain contains information relevant to the crime.
3.2 Previous Record of 100% Accuracy
In collaboration with FBI scientist Dr. Drew Richardson, Dr. Farwell
achieved 100% accuracy in using Brain Fingerprinting to identify FBI agents based
on their brain responses to words and phrases only an FBI agent would recognize. Tests
conducted by Dr. Farwell for the US Navy in collaboration with Navy LCDR Rene S.
Hernandez, Ph.D., also resulted in 100% accurate results. In research on contract with a
US government intelligence agency, Brain Fingerprinting achieved 100% accuracy in
proving the presence or absence of a wide variety of evidence stored in the brains of
individuals involved in over 120 cases. Dr. Farwell has published extensively in the
scientific literature and presented his research to many scientific and technical
audiences throughout the world (see Appendix 1). Brain Fingerprinting has been
subjected to rigorous peer review under US government sponsorship, and has been found
scientifically viable as well as revolutionary in its implications.
3.3 Brain Fingerprinting in Law Enforcement.
Brain Fingerprinting is based on the principle that the brain
is central to all human acts. In a criminal act, there may or may not be many kinds of
peripheral evidence, but the brain is always there, planning, executing, and recording the
crime. The fundamental difference between a perpetrator and a falsely accused, innocent
person is that the perpetrator, having committed the crime, has the details of the crime
stored in his brain, and the innocent suspect does not. This is what Brain Fingerprinting
detects scientifically.
The foremost reason that the investigation of the brain had not become
central to criminal and espionage investigation until now is that, in the past,
neuroscience had not yet progressed to the point where the brain could be utilized as a
source of evidence regarding crime and espionage. The scientific discoveries of Dr.
Lawrence A. Farwell and others have changed this situation. New research conducted at the
Human Brain Research Laboratory and elsewhere has proven that it is possible to match
evidence stored in the brain with evidence from a crime, in an accurate and reliable
manner and without trauma, invasive procedures, or discomfort to the individual.
3.4 Criminal Evidence in the Brain of the Perpetrator.
In addition to the physical and circumstantial evidence that can be
obtained from the crime scene and elsewhere, there is one place where a comprehensive
record of the crime is stored: in the brain of the perpetrator. Brain Fingerprinting
allows evidence to be analyzed directly from the human brain, in an
accurate, objective, non-stressful, non-invasive, and scientific manner.
3.5 Description of Brain Fingerprinting testing
3.5.1 Matching evidence at the crime scene with evidence in the brain
When a crime is committed, a record is stored in the brain of the
perpetrator. Brain Fingerprinting provides a means to objectively and
scientifically connect evidence from the crime scene with evidence stored in the brain.
(This is similar to the process of connecting DNA samples from the perpetrator with
biological evidence found at the scene of the crime; only the evidence evaluated by
Brain Fingerprinting is evidence stored in the brain.) Brain Fingerprinting measures electrical brain activity in response to crime-relevant words or
pictures presented on a computer screen, and reveals a brain MERMER (memory and encoding
related multifaceted electroencephalographic response) when, and only when, the evidence
stored in the brain matches the evidence from the crime scene. Thus, the guilty can be
identified and the innocent can be cleared in an accurate, scientific, objective,
non-invasive, and non-stressful manner.
3.5.2 Four phases of Brain Fingerprinting testing
In fingerprinting and DNA fingerprinting, evidence recognized and
collected at the crime scene, and preserved properly until a suspect is apprehended, is
scientifically compared with evidence on the person of the suspect to detect a match that
would place the suspect at the crime scene. Brain Fingerprinting works similarly,
except that the evidence collected both at the crime scene and on the person of the
suspect (i.e., in the brain as revealed by electrical brain responses) is informational
evidence rather than physical evidence. There are four stages to Brain Fingerprinting, which are similar to the steps in fingerprinting and DNA fingerprinting:
1. Brain Fingerprinting Crime Scene Evidence Collection;
2. Brain Fingerprinting Brain Evidence Collection;
3. Brain Fingerprinting Computer Evidence Analysis; and
4.
Brain Fingerprinting Scientific Result.
In the Crime Scene Evidence Collection, an expert in Brain Fingerprinting
examines the crime scene and other evidence connected with the crime to
identify details of the crime that would be known only to the perpetrator. The expert then
conducts the Brain Evidence Collection in order to determine whether or not the evidence
from the crime scene matches evidence stored in the brain of the suspect. In the Computer
Evidence Analysis, the Brain Fingerprinting system makes a mathematical
determination as to whether or not this specific evidence is stored in the brain, and
computes a statistical confidence for that determination. This determination and
statistical confidence constitute the Scientific Result of Brain Fingerprinting:
either "information present" ("guilty") the details of the
crime are stored in the brain of the suspect or "information absent"
("innocent") the details of the crime are not stored in the brain of the
suspect.
4. A Brief Historical Perspective
4.1 Need for New Scientific Techniques to Identify Perpetrators.
There is a tremendous need for accurate, scientific means of matching
evidence from the crime scene with evidence on the persons of suspects.
This need has inspired some scientists to ask, "What does the
criminal take with him from the crime scene that records his involvement in the
crime?" The answer to this question, of course, is the brain. The brain of the
criminal is always there, recording all of the events like a video camera -- and like his
DNA and fingerprints, the brain always stays with the criminal.
The problem, until recently, has been that there was no way to detect
this record of the crime stored in the brain.
4.2 The discovery of the brain MERMER
The discovery of the brain MERMER by Dr. Lawrence A. Farwell has made
it possible to reveal, with extremely high accuracy, specific information stored in the
brain. MERMER is an acronym for memory and encoding related multifaceted
electroencephalographic response. The MERMER is elicited when the brain recognizes and
takes note of certain specific information (in the case of a crime, this information is
crime-relevant evidence collected from the crime scene). By flashing crime-relevant
information (words or pictures) on a computer screen and measuring brain responses, the
brain MERMER can be used to determine objectively whether or not the details of a specific
crime are stored in a suspect's brain. If (and only if) the evidence is stored in the
brain, a brain MERMER is elicited. As described above, this technique of Brain
Fingerprinting has been found to be highly reliable in scientific tests.
4.3 Brain Central to Crime and Criminal Investigations
As the human brain is central to all human acts, the human brain is
central to the criminal act. The only reason that the brain has not yet become central to
criminal investigations is that, until Dr. Farwell's discovery of Brain Fingerprinting,
there was no scientific, objective way to match the evidence stored in the brain with
evidence from the crime scene. Now that this new technology is available, it is inevitable
that the brain will take its rightful place as a central facet of criminal investigations.
5. Scientific
Procedure, Research, and Applications
5.1 Informational Evidence Detection.
The detection of concealed information stored in the brains of
suspects, witnesses, intelligence sources, and others is of central concern to all phases
of law enforcement, corporate, and intelligence operations. Brain Fingerprinting
(for multifaceted electroencephalographic response analysis - MERA) presents a new
paradigm in forensic science. This new system detects information directly, on the basis
of the electrophysiological manifestations of information-processing brain activity,
measured non-invasively from the scalp. Since Brain Fingerprinting depends only on
brain information processing, it does not depend on the emotional response of the subject.
5.2 The Brain MERMER
Brain Fingerprinting utilizes multifaceted
electroencephalographic response analysis (MERA) to detect information stored in the human
brain. A memory and encoding related multifaceted electroencephalographic response
(MERMER) is elicited when an individual recognizes and processes an incoming stimulus that
is significant or noteworthy. When an irrelevant stimulus is seen, it is seen as being
insignificant and not noteworthy, and the MERMER response is absent. This pattern occurs
within about a second after the stimulus presentation, and can be readily detected using
EEG amplifiers and a computerized signal-detection algorithm.
5.3 Scientific Procedure
Brain Fingerprinting incorporates the following procedure. A
sequence of words or pictures is presented on a video monitor under computer control. Each
stimulus appears for a fraction of a second. Three types of stimuli are presented:
"targets," "irrelevants," and "probes."
The targets are made relevant and noteworthy to all subjects: the
subject is given a list of the target stimuli and instructed to press a particular button
in response to targets, and to press another button in response to all other stimuli.
Since the targets are noteworthy for the subject, they elicit a MERMER.
Most of the non-target stimuli are irrelevant, having no relation to
the crime. These irrelevants do not elicit a MERMER.
Some of the non-target stimuli are relevant to the crime under
investigation. These relevant stimuli are referred to as probes. For a subject who has
committed the crime, the probes are noteworthy due to his knowledge of the details of the
crime, and therefore probes elicit a brain MERMER. For an innocent subject lacking this
detailed knowledge of the crime, probes are indistinguishable from the irrelevants. For
such a subject, the probes are not noteworthy and thus probes do not elicit a MERMER.
5.4 Computer Controlled
The entire Brain Fingerprinting System is under computer
control, including presentation of the stimuli and recording of electrical brain activity,
as well as a mathematical data analysis algorithm that compares the responses to the three
types of stimuli and produces a determination of "information present"
("guilty") or "information absent" ("innocent"), and a
statistical confidence level for this determination. At no time during the testing and
data analysis do any biases and interpretations of a system expert affect the presentation
and results of each stimulus presentation.
5.5 Scientific Experiments, Field Tests, and Criminal Cases
Four scientific studies, field tests, and actual criminal cases
involving over 120 individuals described in various scientific publications and technical
reports by Dr. Lawrence A. Farwell have verified the extremely high level of accuracy, and
overall effectiveness of Brain Fingerprinting. The system had 100% accurate
scientific results in all studies, field tests, and actual cases conducted at the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, a US intelligence agency, the Alexandria (VA) Police Department,
and other organizations and individuals. Some of these tests are described below.
5.5.1 Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) studies
Brain Fingerprinting had 100% accurate scientific results in
distinguishing 17 FBI agents and 4 non-FBI agents from a group of 21 subjects. The
detection of FBI agents indicates that the system could detect members of a criminal or
espionage organization as well as perpetrators of a specific crime. In Experiment 1, the
information detected was specific knowledge that would identify an individual as an FBI
agent. The purpose of this experiment was to determine whether this method could be useful
in detecting members of a group or organization or people with a particular knowledge
(e.g.,. members of a foreign intelligence organization or a terrorist organization).
Stimuli were words, phrases, and acronyms flashed on a computer screen. Experiment 2 at
the FBI correctly detected whether or not individuals had participated in specific,
real-life events.
5.5.2 US intelligence agency studies
Studies completed at a US intelligence agency proved that Brain Fingerprinting
could accurately and reliably detect individuals possessing information
regarding mock crimes and real-life activities, including a small number of actual major
crimes. In Experiment 3 at the agency, the information detected was relevant to a mock
espionage scenario enacted by some of the subjects, and the stimuli that elicited the
brain responses were relevant pictures presented on a computer screen. In Experiment 4 at
the agency, which used visually presented words and phrases as stimuli, the information
detected was relevant to real-life events, including two felony crimes.
5.5.3 US Navy study
Experiment 5 was conducted by Dr. Farwell at the US Navy in
collaboration with Navy LCDR Rene Hernandez, Ph.D. (This experiment was a collaboration
between the agency and the Navy.) In this experiment words, phrases, and acronyms were
presented on a computer screen, and the information detected through brain responses was
relevant to knowledge of military medicine. (This is similar to Experiment 1.)
5.5.4 Field tests and criminal investigations
Brain Fingerprinting was highly effective in the resolution of
a case investigation at the Alexandria Police Department. A police officer was accused of
a series of felony drug crimes. The officer throughout the entire period of investigation
claimed innocence of involvement. His accuser was an individual who had already admitted
his own guilt. It was clear from the evidence that a second person had been involved, and
the accuser identified the officer as that person. The officer admitted that he had spoken
to the accuser on the phone, that his wife had met the accuser on several occasions, and
that he had some of the drugs in question in his possession at certain times, but always
with a legitimate reason. His accuser passed a polygraph exam designed to establish
whether or not his accusations were truthful, picked the officer out of a photo lineup,
and in interrogation displayed accurate and detailed knowledge about the officer. The
Alexandria PD requested Brain Fingerprinting which clearly showed that the officer had no
knowledge of the crime stored in his brain. The investigation was renewed, and there is
now substantial, independent evidence that the officer was indeed innocent, and that his
accuser and another individual framed the officer in order to deflect suspicion from
another person who had carried out the crimes of which the officer was accused. The
resolution of this case was a major advancement in proving the value of the technology in the field.
5.5.5
Results of previous research, field tests, and investigations
Over 120 subjects in the above four experiments were correctly
classified as possessing or not possessing the critical information. There were no false
positives, no false negatives, and no indeterminates. In one criminal case, Brain
Fingerprinting vindicated a police officer falsely accused of a felony. In another actual
criminal case, brain responses of two subjects showed that one subject was present at an
armed robbery, and the other knew nothing of the crime. Brain Fingerprinting correctly classified both subjects, with a statistical confidence of greater than 99% in
each case. In all of these studies and cases, words, phrases, or pictures flashed on a
computer screen containing information relevant to the crimes or other situations elicited
a MERMER only in the subjects who possessed the critical information. Previous published
research by Dr. Farwell and his colleagues (see Appendix 1) has demonstrated similar
results.
Dr. Farwells Brain Fingerprinting Test on J B Grinder
6.1 Background of the James B. Grinder case
On January 8, 1984 Julie Helton was reported missing in Macon, MO.
Three days later her badly beaten body was found near a railroad track near Macon. She had
been raped and stabbed in the neck.
James B. Grinder is the primary suspect in the case. Over the fifteen
years since the crime, he has given several different, contradictory accounts of the
crime. Some accounts involved his participation, and some did not. Some involved
participation by several other individuals. Grinder's accounts contradicted both physical
evidence and the statements of an alleged witness. The various accounts of Grinder and
several others who were allegedly involved all had proven to be unreliable as well as
contradictory. Macon County Sheriff Robert Dawson asked Dr. Farwell to use Brain
Fingerprinting to determine scientifically whether or not Grinder was the perpetrator of
the crime.
6.2 Testing procedure
For the Brain Fingerprinting test on J.B. Grinder, Dr. Farwell followed
the standard Brain Fingerprinting testing procedure described in the scientific literature
and in Dr. Farwells patents. (For details, see Appendix 1.) Grinder wore a headband
equipped with sensors which measured brain-wave responses from the frontal (Fz), central
(Pz), and parietal (Pz) areas of the head. Electrical brain responses were amplified,
digitized, stored on computer disk, and analyzed at the end of the procedure.
During the test, Grinder viewed short phrases flashed on a computer
screen, some of which were probe stimuli containing specific details of the crime that
would be noteworthy to the perpetrator.
Dr. Farwell ran seven separate tests, with five different sets of
probe, target, and irrelevant stimuli. The probe stimuli were phrases relevant to the rape
and murder of Julie Helton that would be noteworthy for the perpetrator of the crime.
These included, for example, the murder weapon, the specific method of killing the victim,
specific injuries inflicted on the victim by the perpetrators before she was killed, what
the perpetrators used to bind the victims hands, the place where the body was left,
items that were left by the perpetrators near the crime scene, and items that were taken
from the victim during the crime.
The target stimuli were made noteworthy to the subject by instructions
given before the test. Grinder was given a list of the target stimuli before the test. He
was instructed to press a special button whenever a target stimulus appeared on the
screen, and another button when anything else appeared on the screen.
The irrelevant stimuli were not relevant to the crime, but would be
equally plausible for an innocent person, (e.g., a weapon that was not the murder weapon,
an injury that the victim did not sustain, a place where the victims body was not
left, etc.)
The test was designed so that:
- The target stimuli would elicit a MERMER, because they were noteworthy to the subject
since he had been told about them and instructed to press a special button when they
appeared;
- The irrelevant stimuli would not elicit a MERMER, because they were not noteworthy to
the subject;
- The probe stimuli would elicit a MERMER only if the subject recognized them as relevant
to the crime, i.e., if the subject had the significant details of the crime stored in his
brain from having committed the crime.
The data analysis consisted of mathematically comparing J.B. Grinders brain-wave responses to the three types of stimuli to determine if the
responses to the probes contained a MERMER (like the target responses) or did not contain
a MERMER (like the irrelevant responses).
6.3 Results of the Brain Fingerprinting test on J.B. Grinder
J.B. Grinders brain-wave responses to the probe stimuli containing
details of the rape and murder of Julie Helton clearly contained a MERMER. (As expected,
the target responses elicited a MERMER, and the irrelevant responses elicited no MERMER.)
The MERMER in response to the crime-relevant probe stimuli indicates that the details of
the rape and murder of Julie Helton were stored in J.B. Grinders brain. The average
responses of Grinders brain to the three types of stimuli are illustrated in Figure
1 in Appendix 2.
The Brain Fingerprinting system mathematically analyzes the
brain-wave responses and makes a determination of "information present
("guilty") or "information absent" ("innocent").
"Information present means that the probe responses, like the target responses,
contain a MERMER indicating that the crime-relevant information is stored in the brain.
"Information absent" means that the details of the crime are not stored in the
brain. The Brain Fingerprinting system also computes a statistical confidence for
the determination of "information present" or "information absent."
The Brain Fingerprinting scientific result for J.B. Grinder was
"information present," with a statistical confidence of 100% (plus or minus 1%).
This indicates that we can conclude with a high degree of confidence that significant
details of Julie Heltons rape and murder are stored in J.B. Grinders brain, even
though fifteen years have passed since the event.
7. Appendix 2 J.B. Grinder’s
Brain-Wave Responses
Figure 1
J.B. Grinders Brain-Wave Responses
To Stimuli Containing Details of Julie Heltons Rape and Murder
The following page displays J.B.
Grinders average brain-wave
responses recorded in response to three types of stimuli: (1) Targets (illustrated
on the figure with a solid line) are phrases that were made relevant to the subject by
instructing him to press a particular button when they appeared on the screen. Note the
large MERMER (memory and encoding related multifaceted electroencephalographic
response), which indicates that these stimuli are relevant to the subject. (2) Irrelevants
(dotted line) are phrases that are not relevant. The MERMER is lacking. (3) Probes
(bold line) are phrases relevant to the rape and murder of Julie Helton, which the subject
gives no overt indication of recognizing. The large MERMER indicates that these specific
details of the crime are relevant and noteworthy for this subject: the details of Julie
Heltons rape and murder are stored in J.B. Grinders brain.
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