Shenton Martha E, Price Bruce H, Levin Laura, Edersheim Judith G
Psychiatry Neuroimaging Laboratory, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, United States; Department of Psychiatry and Radiology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States; VA Boston Healthcare System, Brockton Division, Brockton, MA, United States.
Department of Neurology at McLean Hospital, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States; Center for Law, Brain and Behavior, Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States.
Int J Law Psychiatry. 2018 Nov-Dec;61:50-63. doi: 10.1016/j.ijlp.2018.09.002. Epub 2018 Nov 1.
Important advances in neuroscience and neuroimaging have revolutionized our understanding of the human brain. Many of these advances provide new evidence regarding compensable injuries that have been used to support changes in legal policy. For example, we now know that regions of the brain involved in decision making continue to develop into the mid-20s, and this information weighs heavily in determining that execution or automatic sentence of life without the possibility of parole for someone younger than 18 years old, at the time of the crime, violates the 8th Amendment prohibition against "cruel and unusual punishment." The probative value of other testimony regarding neuroimaging, however, is less clear, particularly for mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), also known as concussion. There is nonetheless some evidence that new imaging technologies, most notably diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), may be useful in detecting mTBI. More specifically, DTI is sensitive to detecting diffuse axonal brain injuries in white matter, the most common brain injury in mTBI. DTI is, in fact, the most promising technique available today for such injuries and it is beginning to be used clinically, although it remains largely within the purview of research. Its probative value is also not clear as it may be both prejudicial and misleading given that standardization is not yet established for use in either the clinic or the courtroom, and thus it may be premature for use in either. There are also concerns with the methods and analyses that have been used to provide quantitative evidence in legal cases. It is within this context that we provide a commentary on the use of neuroimaging in the courtroom, most particularly DTI, and the admissibility of evidence, as well as the definition and role of expert testimony. While there is a great deal of evidence demonstrating cognitive impairments in attention, processing speed, memory, and concentration from neuropsychological testing following mTBI, we focus here on the more recent introduction of DTI imaging in the courtroom. We also review definitions of mTBI followed by admissibility standards for scientific evidence in the courtroom, including Daubert criteria and two subsequent cases that comprise the so-called Daubert trilogy rulings on the admissibility of expert testimony. This is followed by a brief review of neuroimaging techniques available today, the latter with an emphasis on DTI and its application to mTBI. We then review some of the court rulings on the use of DTI. We end by highlighting the importance of neuroimaging in providing a new window on the brain, while cautioning against the premature use of new advances in imaging in the courtroom before standards are established in the clinical arena, which are informed by research. We also discuss further what is needed to reach a tipping point where such advances will provide important and meaningful data with respect to their probative value.
神经科学和神经影像学的重要进展彻底改变了我们对人类大脑的理解。其中许多进展为可补偿损伤提供了新证据,这些证据已被用于支持法律政策的变革。例如,我们现在知道,参与决策的大脑区域会持续发育到25岁左右,这一信息在判定对犯罪时未满18岁的人执行死刑或自动判处无假释可能的终身监禁是否违反美国宪法第八修正案中禁止“残酷和不寻常惩罚”的规定时具有重要影响。然而,其他关于神经影像学的证词的证明价值则不太明确,尤其是对于轻度创伤性脑损伤(mTBI),即脑震荡。尽管如此,有一些证据表明,新的成像技术,最显著的是扩散张量成像(DTI),可能有助于检测mTBI。更具体地说,DTI对检测白质中的弥漫性轴索脑损伤很敏感,而这是mTBI中最常见的脑损伤类型。事实上,DTI是目前针对此类损伤最有前景的技术,并且它已开始在临床上使用,尽管它在很大程度上仍属于研究范畴。其证明价值也不明确因为鉴于临床或法庭使用的标准化尚未确立,它可能既具有偏见性又具有误导性,因此在两者中使用可能都为时过早。对于在法律案件中提供定量证据所使用的方法和分析也存在担忧。正是在这样的背景下,我们对法庭上神经影像学的使用,尤其是DTI的使用、证据的可采性以及专家证词的定义和作用进行评论。虽然有大量证据表明mTBI后通过神经心理学测试可发现注意力、处理速度、记忆和注意力方面的认知障碍,但我们在此重点关注DTI成像在法庭上的最新应用。我们还回顾了mTBI的定义,随后是法庭上科学证据的可采性标准,包括达伯特标准以及构成所谓达伯特三部曲关于专家证词可采性裁决的两个后续案例。接下来简要回顾当今可用的神经影像学技术,重点是DTI及其在mTBI中的应用。然后我们回顾一些关于DTI使用的法庭裁决。最后,我们强调神经影像学在为大脑提供新视角方面的重要性,同时告诫在临床领域基于研究确立标准之前,不要在法庭上过早使用成像方面的新进展。我们还进一步讨论了要达到这样一个转折点需要什么,在这个转折点上,这些进展将提供关于其证明价值的重要且有意义的数据。