No. 62-3, March 2011
Index
- Avoiding Irrational Neurolaw Exuberance: a Plea for Neuromodesty - Stephen J. Morse
- Brain Scans as Evidence: Truths, Proofs, Lies, and Lessons - Francis X. Shen and Owen D. Jones
- Foreword: the Brain Sciences and Criminal Law Norms - Theodore Y. Blumoff
- Functional Magnetic Resonance Detection of Deception: Great as Fundamental Research, Inadequate as Substantive Evidence - Charles Adelsheim
- Life, Death, and Neuroimaging: the Advantages and Disadvantages of the Defense's Use of Neuroimages in Capital Cases - Lessons from the Front - John H. Blume and Emily C. Paavola
- Neuropsychiatry in the Courtroom - Richard L. Elliott
- Neuroscience Basics for Lawyers - Oliver R. Goodenough and Micaela Tucker
- Schoolhouse Rock: Lessons of Homosexual Tolerance in Keeton v. Anderson-wiley from the Classroom to the Constitution - Billie Pritchard
- Serencipitous Timing: the Coincidental Emergence of the New Brain Science and the Advent of an Epistemological Approach to Determining the Admissibility of Expert Testimony - Edward J. Imwinkelried
- Taking a Bite Out of Speech Regulation: the Supreme Court Upholds First Amendment Protection for Depictions of Animal Cruelty in United States v. Stevens - J. Matthew Barnwell
- Ten Legal Dissonances - Morris B. Hoffman
- Transcript: the Brain Sciences in the Courtroom -