Zack Lynch is author of The Neuro Revolution: How Brain Science Is Changing Our World (St. Martin's Press, July 2009).
This month's IEEE Spectrum has an excellent article, Neurotechnology: Bioethics and the Brain, that describes how rapid advancements in brain imaging technologies will have significant implications for society in the relative near future.
To make their point, the authors describe how one of their colleagues has recently used fMRI scans to show highly significant correlations between lying and truth telling and the metabolic activity in the region of the brain important to paying attention and monitoring errors.
The article highlights several important neuroethical issues:
Neurotechnology will never be 100% deterministic but it will provide some very powerful predictive information, much more than most people currently want to believe.
Later this week I will be joining the Gruter Institute for its annual neuroethics conference. The first day includes the following talks:
I look forward to exploring the above issues and extending the discussion to include the societal implications of human performance enhancing neuroceuticals.
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