Meixner John B
Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA,
Curr Neurol Neurosci Rep. 2015;15(2):513. doi: 10.1007/s11910-014-0513-1.
The use of neuroscience in criminal law applications is an increasingly discussed topic among legal and psychological scholars. Over the past 5 years, several prominent federal criminal cases have referenced neuroscience studies and made admissibility determinations regarding neuroscience evidence. Despite this growth, the field is exceptionally young, and no one knows for sure how significant of a contribution neuroscience will make to criminal law. This article focuses on three major subfields: (1) neuroscience-based credibility assessment, which seeks to detect lies or knowledge associated with a crime; (2) application of neuroscience to aid in assessments of brain capacity for culpability, especially among adolescents; and (3) neuroscience-based prediction of future recidivism. The article briefly reviews these fields as applied to criminal law and makes recommendations for future research, calling for the increased use of individual-level data and increased realism in laboratory studies.
在刑法应用中使用神经科学,是法律和心理学学者日益讨论的话题。在过去五年里,几起著名的联邦刑事案件引用了神经科学研究,并对神经科学证据的可采性做出了判定。尽管有这种发展,但该领域非常年轻,没有人确切知道神经科学将对刑法做出多大贡献。本文聚焦于三个主要子领域:(1)基于神经科学的可信度评估,旨在检测与犯罪相关的谎言或知识;(2)应用神经科学辅助评估犯罪能力,尤其是在青少年中;(3)基于神经科学预测未来再犯。本文简要回顾这些应用于刑法的领域,并为未来研究提出建议,呼吁在实验室研究中更多地使用个体层面的数据并提高现实性。