Like most Americans, Larry Farwell wants to help fight the War on Terrorism. And he thinks his Fairfield, Iowa-based company, the Human Brain Research Laboratory, can do just that. The Laboratory has developed “brain fingerprinting,” a technology that measures a suspect’s brain waves-and, says Farwell, can tip off investigators to the man who knows too much. It works like this: Interrogators fit subjects with sensor-filled headgear and show them a random series of images, some related to their investigation. A computer analyzes the brain’s response to determine whether the subject recognizes the relevant pictures-an Al Qaeda training manual or a terrorist recruiter, for example. “In some cases, this could help identify someone intent on attack before they strike,” says Farwell.
After about a decade of development, Farwell’s company has yet to land a big contract with military or law enforcement agencies such as the CIA, the Department of Defense, the Secret Service, or the FBI. According to an October, 2001, report to the U.S. Senate from the General Accounting Office, these agencies were avoiding brain fingerprinting because “the research expenses, equipment and training costs were perceived to exceed benefits.” But that report was written before the War on Terrorism and the federal government’s threefold spending increase for security technologies. Now Farwell says he is optimistic about winning a contract, and countless other entrepreneurs, scientific labs, industry lobbyists and government contractors are scrambling to do their patriotic duty-as well as get a piece of the multi-billion dollar action.
In the first days after the September attacks, the president requested $40 billion to rebuild and reinforce the country against further atrocities. Congress more than complied, giving a total of $103.7 billion to R&D-related agencies such as the Defense Department, the National Institutes of Health and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration for fiscal year 2002, the largest amount ever allotted and the largest percentage increase in nearly 20 years. The bill earmarks $1.5 billion specifically for R&D into counter-terrorism initiatives-triple what was spent in 2001. “Emergency appropriations are routine,” says Kei Koizum, director of the Research and Development Budget and Policy Program at the American Association for the Advancement of Science. “The size of this particular funding [increase] is not.”
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