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Brain Scans as Evidence: Truths, Proofs, Lies, and LessonsFrancis X. ShenUniversity of Minnesota Law School Owen D. JonesVanderbilt University - Law School & Dept. of Biological Sciences February 23, 2011 Mercer Law Review, Vol. 62, p. 861, 2011 Vanderbilt Public Law Research Paper No. 11-2 Abstract: This contribution to the Brain Sciences in the Courtroom Symposium identifies and discusses issues important to admissibility determinations when courts confront brain-scan evidence. Through the vehicle of the landmark 2010 federal criminal trial U.S. v. Semrau (which considered, for the first time, the admissibility of brain scans for lie detection purposes) this article highlights critical evidentiary issues involving: 1) experimental design; 2) ecological and external validity; 3) subject compliance with researcher instructions; 4) false positives; and 5) drawing inferences about individuals from group data. The article’s lessons are broadly applicable to the new wave of neurolaw cases now being seen in U.S. courts.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 23 Keywords: neurolaw, law and neuroscience, law and the brain, bioscience, neuroscience and law, Daubert, Frye, lie detection, polygraph, brain scans, fMRI, EEG, Semrau, scientific evidence, admissibility Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: February 24, 2011 ; Last revised: August 24, 2011Suggested Citation |
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