Sugar and Spice and Everything Not So Nice?
Jim Windell
Sugar and Spice and Everything Not So Nice?
Jim Windell
Are We close to Learning to Weaken Fear Memories?
Jim Windell
Are Video Games Just Mindless Pursuits?
Jim Windell
Just Take a Pill to Stave Off Depression and Anxiety
By Jim Windell
By Jim Windell
Is it all in your mind if you take a placebo for pain and it works?
Drinking Caffeine Regularly Will Change Your Brain
By Jim Windell
The Latest on the Effects of Antidepressants
By Jim Windell
A Brain-Related Visual Problem May Affect More Children Than Thought
By Jim Windell
Do We Pay a Price for Disagreeing?
By Jim Windell
Early Life Experiences May be Passed Down to Children
By Jim Windell
Researchers Find Brain Patterns that Could Improve Mental Health Disorder Diagnosis
By Jim Windell
The Roots of Mother’s Empathy
By Jim Windell
What are Empathy and Perspective-Taking Made of?
By Jim Windell
Subdural Bleeding in Infants is Proof of Abuse, Right?
By Jim Windell
By Jim Windell
I don’t know about you, but I have noticed that many people, particularly after they retire, seem to lose the zest they had previously for engaging in new activities, taking on new challenges or learning new things. Do most people need the structure of a job and a daily routine in order to maintain an interest in the new or the novel? Do they just get tired and want to put their brain – and their body – in a rocking chair? Or is there some other explanation?
When someone is charged with a serious crime, say, for instance, a murder do we have any neurological tests that will help us answer such questions “Was this person stable when he committed the crime?” or “Should he be held accountable under the law for his criminal actions?”
These kinds of questions were posed in a recent article in the American Bar Association Journal. In the article, written by Kevin Davis, it was pointed out that millions of dollars have been spent on research to better understand the human brain. Yet, the article wondered if a host of legal questions could be answered today – any better than in past decades.
“What’s going on in a person’s brain is relevant to so many domains of law,” says Owen Jones, director of the research network and the Glenn M. Weaver, M.D., and Mary Ellen Weaver Chair in Law, Brain and Behavior at Vanderbilt Law School. “Historically, there’s been no way to make those assessments,” Jones adds. “When you’re trying to understand the multiple causes of a person’s behavior, you want to try to understand what’s giving rise to their mental states.”
There is no doubt, Davis points out, that criminal defense lawyers use or cite neuroscience to help mitigate or explain their clients’ behavior. For example, it has been found that between 2005 and 2015, there were more than 2,800 judicial opinions in which neuroscience played a role.