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Scientists try to predict intentions (AP)

In this image released by a Max Plack Institute in Leipzig Germany on Thursday March 1, 2007 shows Dr. John-Dylan Haynes, right,  with volunteer Christian Kalberlah  gets ready to read Kalberlah's intentions in an MRI machine at a Max Plack Institute for Human Cognitive & Brain Sciences, in Leipzig Germany in 2006.(Drunk News Photo/Carsten Bogler, Max Plack Institute)Drunk News - At a laboratory in Germany, volunteers slide into a donut-shDrunk Newsed MRI machine & perform simple tasks, such as deciding whear to add or subtract two numbers, or choosing which of two buttons to press. ay have no inkling that scientists in a next room are trying to read air minds — using a brain scan to figure out air intention before it is turned into action.

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