Neuropsychiatry in the Courtroom - Richard L. Elliott

CitationVol. 62 No. 3
Publication year2011

Neuropsychiatry in the Courtroom

by Richard L. Elliott*

I. Introduction

This Symposium, "The Brain Sciences in the Courtroom," will make frequent reference to neuropsychiatry, neuroimaging, and brain science, and assumes a rudimentary understanding of neuroscience. While some readers have considerable experience in these areas, others might benefit from a brief introduction to key concepts in neuroscience, and to their applications in the courtroom from a historical perspective. In providing such an introduction, several points will become clear. For 200 years, lawyers, judges, and expert witnesses have struggled to understand how neuroscience can be helpful in the courtroom, with varying degrees of success. This is, in part, due to the fact that the brain is even more complex than might be supposed, rendering any attempt to reduce human emotion and behavior to a simple causal explanation, easily comprehensible to decisionmakers, intractable. With this limitation, the ultimate goal of this review is to provide a background to understand some of the promises and limitations that forensic neuropsychiatry has to offer. We begin by describing neuropsychiatry, presenting a brief introduction to the organization in the brain, and reviewing several historical cases illustrating problems applying neuropsychiatry in legal settings.

II. What is Neuropsychiatry?1

Neuropsychiatry can be defined as that branch of medicine concerning mental disorders arising from the nervous system, emphasizing the organic or physical causes and explanations for mental disorders, and

* Professor and Director of Medical Ethics, Mercer University School of Medicine; Adjunct Professor, Walter F. George School of Law, Mercer University. University of Wisconsin (M.D., 1978; Ph. D., Biophysics 1979).

1. For a brief review, see W.A. Lishman, What is Neuropsychiatry?, 55 J. Neurol. Neurosurg. & Psychiatry 983 (1992).

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using neuroanatomy, neurophysiology, and neurochemistry as its basic building blocks. Forensic neuropsychiatry is the application of this knowledge in legal contexts.

Though neuropsychiatry is the prevailing model within psychiatry today, historically, the dominant model in psychiatry has shifted between biological and psychosocial models. Psychosocial models focus on social, environmental, family, and interpersonal contributions to mental disorders. Thus, in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, moral (related to morale, such as psychosocial) treatments advocated by Pinel and Tuke provided the framework for the humane treatment of the mentally ill.2 From the middle of the nineteenth to the early part of the twentieth centuries, many physicians concerned with mental disorders were neurologists, and biological views were favored. Recall that Freud was trained in neurology, and that his early works described mental processes in hydraulic and mechanical terms, with forces and pressures leading to symptom formation. Even though Freud analyzed psychodynamic factors, he was careful to indicate that physiological causes yet to be discovered probably contributed to an individual's mental state.3 The psychodynamic paradigm dominated psychiatry in the early and middle twentieth century when most psychiatrists were psychoanalytically trained and oriented. But in the 1970s, neuropsychiatry began to retake the field in training programs due to a combination of factors, including the development of more effective medications, disillusionment with the effectiveness of psychoanalysis, invention of intriguing tools with which to study the brain (such as CT scans, MRIs, and radionuclide labeling of probes with which to study binding to receptors), and the infusion of money from pharmaceutical companies into educational programs.

The term "neuropsychiatry" is often used as if it were synonymous with psychiatry, but it is only one-albeit currently the dominant-model with which psychiatrists approach the understanding of mental illness. As this is the model under consideration, let us turn to a brief overview of the building blocks for the neuropsychiatric model.

2. See Edward Shorter, A History of Psychiatry: From the Era of Asylum to the Age of Prozac 19-22 (1997).

3. Ernest Jones, The Life and Work of Sigmund Freud 133-45 (Lionel Trilling & Steven Marcus eds., 1962).

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III. How is the Brain Organized?4

The human brain weighs approximately three pounds and is responsible for a variety of activities, such as perceptions, emotions, cognition, and behaviors. As many of these occur simultaneously, the brain must be organized in such a manner as to allow different activities to either occur independently or in coordination, as the need arises. For example, the reader of this Article is able to perceive the words on the page, interpret their meaning, maintain body posture, attend to environmental stimuli, and regulate bodily functions such as breathing, heart rate, blood pressure, and temperature. To do all ofthis, the brain has evolved an organization that segregates and integrates functions at gross anatomic and microscopic neural levels.

At the gross anatomic level, the brain's outer, or cortical, portion is divided into four lobes: frontal, parietal, temporal, and occipital. These anatomic divisions may be appreciated from visual inspection of the largest grooves-sulci-that separate them. Finding that neurophysiologic specificity or localization is associated with these divisions is key to our future discussion. Thus, temporal lobes are associated with-among other things-input to language circuits; frontal lobes are associated with planning, language output, and motor functions; parietal lobes are associated with sensory localization; and the occipital lobe is associated with vision. This is only a short list of localized functions, and numerous other functions have been partly or wholly localized to specific areas of the brain. Less well understood with respect to mental processes are deeper brain structures such as the basal ganglia, thalamus, hypothalamus, and cerebellum; these areas are essential to regulating unconscious functions such as motor control, temperature, appetite, and sleep, but current research indicates that these areas also affect higher mental functions.

At the next, microscopic, level of brain structure are the one hundred billion individual neurons in an adult brain, along with their connections. Each neuron has a zone for receiving inputs-dendrites-and has axonal projections for sending outgoing signals. Connections with other neurons are made though synapses, where one neuron releases neurotransmitters, for example, serotonin or dopamine, across a small gap. Following this release, the neurotransmitters can bind to receptors on the second neuron. If sufficient neurotransmitters bind to the next

4. A number of excellent introductions to neuroscience are available....

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