Various neuroscientific techniques are increasingly being used in criminal courts causing a vivid debate on the way that this kind of techniques will and should be used as scientific evidence. The role of experts in this context is important, since it is them that analyse, present, interpret and communicate the results of these techniques to the judges and the jury. In an attempt to contribute to the discussion about the role of the experts in criminal cases where neuroimaging evidence was introduced, we examined twenty seven cases from the US and Europe. Focusing on the role of experts and their presentation of neuroscientific evidence, we aimed to examine the extent to which neuroimaging data can contribute to the construction of a solid ...
In this article, we consider the therapeutic jurisprudence implications of the use of neuroimaging t...
Despite the popularity of structural neuroimaging techniques in twenty-first-century research, its r...
This invited commentary for Journal of Law & the Biosciences considers four empirical studies previo...
Various neuroscientific techniques are increasingly being used in criminal courts causing a vivid de...
Insanity is a distinctive element of criminal law because it brings together two very different disc...
Insanity is a distinctive element of criminal law because it brings together two very different disc...
As the United States continues to bear witness to high-profile episodes of police violence, many hav...
Neuroimaging evidence should be restricted in terms of admissibility in the courts, and should only ...
Applied neuroscientific knowledge such as brain neuroimaging has widespread application in the medic...
Neuroscientific evidence is increasingly being used in criminal trials as part of psychiatric testim...
Forensic evaluations of insanity have recently borne witness to an influx of neuroimaging methods, e...
This exploratory paper seeks to examine the use of neuroscientific evidence in the criminal trial pr...
Neuroscientific evidence is prominently present in courts of law and may come in many forms. For exa...
Neurobiological evidence in the form of brain scans (MRI images, PET images, etc.) is being introduc...
The robust neuroimaging debate has dealt mostly with philosophical questions about free will, respon...
In this article, we consider the therapeutic jurisprudence implications of the use of neuroimaging t...
Despite the popularity of structural neuroimaging techniques in twenty-first-century research, its r...
This invited commentary for Journal of Law & the Biosciences considers four empirical studies previo...
Various neuroscientific techniques are increasingly being used in criminal courts causing a vivid de...
Insanity is a distinctive element of criminal law because it brings together two very different disc...
Insanity is a distinctive element of criminal law because it brings together two very different disc...
As the United States continues to bear witness to high-profile episodes of police violence, many hav...
Neuroimaging evidence should be restricted in terms of admissibility in the courts, and should only ...
Applied neuroscientific knowledge such as brain neuroimaging has widespread application in the medic...
Neuroscientific evidence is increasingly being used in criminal trials as part of psychiatric testim...
Forensic evaluations of insanity have recently borne witness to an influx of neuroimaging methods, e...
This exploratory paper seeks to examine the use of neuroscientific evidence in the criminal trial pr...
Neuroscientific evidence is prominently present in courts of law and may come in many forms. For exa...
Neurobiological evidence in the form of brain scans (MRI images, PET images, etc.) is being introduc...
The robust neuroimaging debate has dealt mostly with philosophical questions about free will, respon...
In this article, we consider the therapeutic jurisprudence implications of the use of neuroimaging t...
Despite the popularity of structural neuroimaging techniques in twenty-first-century research, its r...
This invited commentary for Journal of Law & the Biosciences considers four empirical studies previo...