FMRI Journal Club: Ethical issues in neuroimaging: Difference between revisions
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*[[Image:Ethics_Neuroimaging.pdf Neuroethics of Neuromarketing]] | *[[Image:Ethics_Neuroimaging.pdf | Neuroethics of Neuromarketing]] | ||
*[[image:Hope_and_Hype.pdf Neuromarketing: hope and hype]] | *[[image:Hope_and_Hype.pdf | Neuromarketing: hope and hype]] | ||
*[[image:What_is_Neuromarketing.pdf What is neuromarketing?]] | *[[image:What_is_Neuromarketing.pdf | What is neuromarketing?]] | ||
*[[image:Neuromarketing_Patent.pdf United states patent #6,099,319: neuroimaging as a marketing tool]] | *[[image:Neuromarketing_Patent.pdf | United states patent #6,099,319: neuroimaging as a marketing tool]] | ||
Revision as of 16:21, 3 May 2010
Ethical Issues in Neuroimaging
We will meet Tuesdays at 2 pm in 58-261A of the NPI
Students are expected to come to class prepared to present and discuss the contents of the articles.
Here are some readings as they pile up:
- A wonderful article on the compelling power of neuroimages CAVEAT_LECTOR.pdf
- The instructor's early warning. JMRI 6, 273-274, 1996
- Neuroimaging: Separating the Promise from the Pipe Dreams
- What we can do and what we cannot do with fMRI
A few topic ideas
- The brain of a criminal
- Making the big bucks (see http://www.neurofocus.com/)
- The criminal brain
- Boundaries of safety
- Physiology of ethics and morality "the ethical brain"
- Medical privacy in neuroimaging research - what should you know about your subject's health?
- Neuroeconomics: Can we really do this?
Week 1
3/30 Led by Katherine Narr:
- Neurology. 2008 Jan 29;70(5):384-90. Practical approaches to incidental findings in brain imaging research. Illes J, Kirschen MP, Edwards E, Bandettini P, Cho MK, Ford PJ, Glover GH, Kulynych J, Macklin R, Michael DB, Wolf SM, Grabowski T, Seto B.
- Morris Z, Whiteley WN, Longstreth WT Jr, Weber F, Lee YC, Tsushima Y, Alphs H, Ladd SC, Warlow C, Wardlaw JM, Al-Shahi Salman R. Incidental findings on brain magnetic resonance imaging: systematic review and meta-analysis. BMJ. 2009 Aug 17;339:b3016. doi: 10.1136/bmj.b3016
Week 2
4/6 Led by Elizabeth Sowell
- Lu LH, Dapretto M, O'Hare ED, Kan E, McCourt ST, Thompson PM, Toga AW, Bookheimer SY, Sowell ER (2009) Relationships between Brain Activation and Brain Structure in Normally Developing Children. Cereb Cortex.
Week 3 - No Meeting
4/13
There will be no meeting this week. We will continue on 4/20.
Week 4
4/20 No Lie MRI (this may take more than one session)
A number of groups have reported reliable detection of true and false using fMRI, usually with the aid of machine learning/pattern analysis schemes.
We will discuss a variety of issues here
- Does this actually work?
- Does a Polygraph work?
- Who should profit?
- What does this do to our rights to privacy?
Readings:
- How to beat an fMRI lie detector
- Don't Even Think About Lying
- Detection of Deception with fMRI: Are we there yet?
- Functional Neuroimaging of Belief, Disbelief, and Uncertainty
- Classifying spatial patterns of brain activity with machine learning methods: application to lie detection
Week 5
5/4 Neuropolitics (a little late...)
Dr. Iacoboni has agreed to come to talk with us about these materials at a later date, as well.
Some Readings
- This Is Your Brain on Politics
- This is Your Brain on Politics? Martha Farah comments
- Iacoboni Responds to Neuropolitics Criticism
- Us versus them: Political attitudes and party affiliation influence neural response to faces of presidential candidates
- The Emband 24 and the Hitachi Brain Analyzer
- Mind games: How not to mix politics and science
- FKF Applied Research
Week 6
5/4 Presented by Leo and Derek
Hello all,
Here are the papers for this week. Attached are:
primary papers:
- Neuroethics of Neuromarketing
- Neuromarketing: hope and hype
- What is neuromarketing?
- United states patent #6,099,319: neuroimaging as a marketing tool
The first discusses major ethical issues raised by the advent of neuromarketing.
The second asks "why use imaging for marketing at all?"
The third, "what is NM" is a short meta-analysis of neuromarketing as a field of study unto itself.
The patent document is a useful example of how a neuromarketing project is carried out. No need to read the whole thing.
Questions to think about:
- 1)Is this even feasible?
- 2)How exactly would it work?
- 3)How might it change marketing?
- 4)How does it affect privacy?
- 5)What are the implications/possible future applications of this sort of research?
Regards,
Leo
Week 7
5/4 Led By Adriana Galvan
- tbd
Week 8
Week 9
Week 10
5/25 Presented by Wei Li
Week 11
Week 12
6/8 Led by Jack van Horn
- tbd