Abstract
We test the possibility of tapping the subconscious mind for face recognition using consumer-grade BCIs. To this end, we performed an experiment whereby subjects were presented with photographs of famous persons with the expectation that about 20% of them would be (consciously) recognized; and since the photos are of famous persons, we expected that subjects would have seen before some of the 80% they didn’t (consciously) recognize. Further, we expected that their subconscious would have recognized some of those in the 80% pool that they had seen before. An exit questionnaire and a set of criteria allowed us to label recognitions as conscious, false, no recognitions, or subconscious recognitions. We analyzed a number of event related potentials training and testing a support vector machine. We found that our method is capable of differentiating between no recognitions and subconscious recognitions with promising accuracy levels, suggesting that tapping the subconscious mind for face recognition is feasible.
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