How should insights about the brain affect the course of a criminal trial, from the arguments in a courtroom to the issuing of a sentence?
This was the topic of the Fred Kavli Public Symposium, held recently at the Society for Neuroscience's "Neuroscience 2011." Titled "The Brain on Trial: Neuroscience and the Law," the symposium looked at how advances in neuroscience are both challenging and assisting the judicial system. To explore this further, The Kavli Foundation brought together three experts to discuss the subject. Joining the dialogue:
- Alan Leshner, symposium chair; chief executive officer of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and former head of the National Institute of Drug Abuse;
- Martha Farah, director of the Center for Neuroscience and Society, University of Pennsylvania;
- Jay Giedd, MD, an expert in adolescent brain development at the National Institute of Mental Health and chief of NIMH's Unit on Brain Imaging in the Child Psychiatry Branch.
Another issue is how a deeper understanding of addiction should affect sentencing. Said Leshner, "By combining the health approach to the criminal justice approach, I think you have a better chance of having effective and acceptable public policy. If you don't deal with the illness or the brain part of drug addiction, you have much less chance of actually reducing the behavior you don't like, whether it's drug using or committing crimes."
More information: For the complete discussion with Alan Leshner, Martha Farah and Jay Giedd, visit: http://www.kavlifo … -brain-trial
Provided by The Kavli Foundation
"The brain on trial." December 12th, 2011. http://medicalxpress.com/news/2011-12-brain-trial.html
Posted byRobert Karl Stonjek
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