|
||||
|
||||
Brain Imaging for Legal Thinkers: A Guide for the PerplexedOwen D. JonesVanderbilt University - Law School & Dept. of Biological Sciences Joshua BuckholtzVanderbilt University, Neuroscience Program Jeffrey D. SchallVanderbilt University - Department of Psychology Rene MaroisVanderbilt University - Department of Psychology Center for Integrative and Cognitive Neuroscience December 20, 2009 Stanford Technology Law Review, Vol. 5, 2009 Vanderbilt Public Law Research Paper No. 10-09 Abstract: It has become increasingly common for brain images to be proffered as evidence in criminal and civil litigation. This Article - the collaborative product of scholars in law and neuroscience - provides three things. First, it provides the first introduction, specifically for legal thinkers, to brain imaging. It describes in accessible ways the new techniques and methods that the legal system increasingly encounters. Second, it provides a tutorial on how to read and understand a brain-imaging study. It does this by providing an annotated walk-through of the recently-published work (by three of the authors - Buckholtz, Jones, and Marois) that discovered the brain activity underlying a person's decisions: a) whether to punish someone; and b) how much to punish. The annotation uses the 'Comment' feature of the Word software to supply contextual and step-by-step commentary on what unfamiliar terms mean, how and why brain imaging experiments are designed as they are, and how to interpret the results. Third, the Article offers some general guidelines about how to avoid misunderstanding brain images in legal contexts and how to identify when others are misusing brain images. The Article is a product of the 'Law and Neuroscience Project', supported by the MacArthur Foundation.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 49 Keywords: brain, brain imaging, brain scan, neuroscience, law & neuroscience, litigation, evidence, functional magnetic resonance imaging, Daubert, behavioral biology, fMRI, MRI, EEG, MEG, PET Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: March 4, 2010Suggested CitationContact Information
|
|
||||||||||||||||||
© 2013 Social Science Electronic Publishing, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
FAQ
Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
Copyright
This page was processed by apollo7 in 0.547 seconds