This Article examines the idea that individuals have a moral and constitutional right of control over the use of their thoughts vis-à-vis the state. As a point of departure, I consider the prospect of a forensic neuroimaging device that was capable of eliciting recall and recognition from a criminal suspect without the suspect’s having even to answer an interrogator’s question. Reflection on government access to this sort of interrogation technique suggests that the state should be prohibited from either extracting a person’s thoughts without her consent or making use of her compelled thoughts to lay criminal blame upon her. Though neither judges nor scholars have defended this account of the right to silence in explicit terms, the notion o...
The rapid development of neurotechnologies poses novel constitutional issues for criminal law and cr...
This paper concerns a well-known, but badly misunderstood, constitutional right. The Fifth Amendment...
Abstract: The protection of the mind through human rights law has been receiving increasing attentio...
This paper argues that legal privacy should be afforded to the content of the mind, comparing cognit...
The Fifth Amendment protects criminal suspects from being forced to provide testimonial declaratio...
Will brain science be used by the government to access the most private of spaces — our minds — agai...
Emerging surveillance technologies now allow operators to collect information located within the bra...
What would life be like if it became impossible to keep a secret? We may find out with the advent of...
Like the Fourth Amendment ban on unreasonable searches and seizures, the privilege against self-incr...
With each passing day, new technologies push the horizons of official government investigative and s...
The last decade has witnessed a profusion of commentary on mind-reading devices. Instead of offeri...
One of the most prominent ethical concerns regarding emerging neurotechnologies is mental privacy. T...
Supreme Court decisions have vacillated between two incompatible readings of the Fifth Amendment gua...
Imagine for a moment that it is the year 2020. An American company has developed a mind-reading devi...
Mind-reading is no longer a concept confined to the world of science-fiction: Brain reading technol...
The rapid development of neurotechnologies poses novel constitutional issues for criminal law and cr...
This paper concerns a well-known, but badly misunderstood, constitutional right. The Fifth Amendment...
Abstract: The protection of the mind through human rights law has been receiving increasing attentio...
This paper argues that legal privacy should be afforded to the content of the mind, comparing cognit...
The Fifth Amendment protects criminal suspects from being forced to provide testimonial declaratio...
Will brain science be used by the government to access the most private of spaces — our minds — agai...
Emerging surveillance technologies now allow operators to collect information located within the bra...
What would life be like if it became impossible to keep a secret? We may find out with the advent of...
Like the Fourth Amendment ban on unreasonable searches and seizures, the privilege against self-incr...
With each passing day, new technologies push the horizons of official government investigative and s...
The last decade has witnessed a profusion of commentary on mind-reading devices. Instead of offeri...
One of the most prominent ethical concerns regarding emerging neurotechnologies is mental privacy. T...
Supreme Court decisions have vacillated between two incompatible readings of the Fifth Amendment gua...
Imagine for a moment that it is the year 2020. An American company has developed a mind-reading devi...
Mind-reading is no longer a concept confined to the world of science-fiction: Brain reading technol...
The rapid development of neurotechnologies poses novel constitutional issues for criminal law and cr...
This paper concerns a well-known, but badly misunderstood, constitutional right. The Fifth Amendment...
Abstract: The protection of the mind through human rights law has been receiving increasing attentio...