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Smart seat can tell whether you're shifty or snoozing

By Paul Marks

14 June 2003

AN AIRLINE pilot asks air traffic control for permission to make an emergency landing. “One of our passenger seats says its occupant is a shifty character who might be a nervous terrorist,” he says. “We want him off this flight.”

Scoff if you like, but intelligent airline seats might become a reality if work by a British lab pans out. Qinetiq, the UK’s part-privatised defence lab, is moving into civil aviation. Engineers at the lab’s Multifunctional Materials Group in Farnborough, Hampshire, are designing a new generation of seats that could help busy cabin crew judge whether a passenger is a…

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