通过扫描仪:功能神经成像作为刑事被告过去精神状态的证据。

IF 4.9 1区 社会学 Q1 Social Sciences Stanford Law Review Pub Date : 2010-04-01
Teneille Brown, Emily Murphy
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引用次数: 0

摘要

与颅相学和测谎仪一样,社会再次面临着一种媒体声称能够读懂我们思想的设备。功能性磁共振成像(fMRI)和其他类型的功能性脑成像技术,目前正被引入刑事审判的各个阶段,作为被告过去精神状态的证据。这篇文章表明,功能性脑图像目前不应该作为证据被法庭接受。使用联邦证据规则403提供的分析框架作为Daubert/Frye分析的门槛,我们证明,当功能磁共振成像方法被正确理解时,大脑图像只能最低限度地证明被告过去的精神状态,并且几乎肯定比证明更不公平。对基础科学的仔细和详细的解释使本文有别于其他文章,这些文章倾向于为所有与法庭相关的应用涂上一层可信性和确定性的光泽。相反,我们认为,这种技术除了可能误导陪审员和浪费法庭资源之外,还可能呈现出一种特别强烈的不公平偏见。最后,由于fMRI方法可能有一天会得到改进,使其证明价值不再因其极端的不公平偏见而失色,我们提供了一份非详尽的清单,法官和律师可以使用它来验证功能性脑图像,并评估这些图像与事实发现者所给予的权重。
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Through a scanner darkly: functional neuroimaging as evidence of a criminal defendant's past mental states.

As with phrenology and the polygraph, society is again confronted with a device that the media claims is capable of reading our minds. Functional magnetic resonance imaging ("fMRI"), along with other types of functional brain imaging technologies, is currently being introduced at various stages of a criminal trial as evidence of a defendant's past mental state. This Article demonstrates that functional brain images should not currently be admitted as evidence into courts for this purpose. Using the analytical framework provided by Federal Rule of Evidence 403 as a threshold to a Daubert/Frye analysis, we demonstrate that, when fMRI methodology is properly understood, brain images are only minimally probative of a defendant's past mental states and are almost certainly more unfairly prejudicial than probative on balance. Careful and detailed explanation of the underlying science separates this Article from others, which have tended to paint fMRI with a gloss of credibility and certainty for all courtroom-relevant applications. Instead, we argue that this technology may present a particularly strong form of unfair prejudice in addition to its potential to mislead jurors and waste the court's resources. Finally, since fMRI methodology may one day improve such that its probative value is no longer eclipsed by its extreme potential for unfair prejudice, we offer a nonexhaustive checklist that judges and counsel can use to authenticate functional brain images and assess the weight these images are to be accorded by fact finders.

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