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Research article summary:
Neuroethics: an emerging new discipline in the study of brain and cognition.
Abstract Extract: The vision for the special issue in Brain and Cognition is rooted in the need to bring to the foreground the state of scientific knowledge in research and clinical neuroimaging ethics. To this end, the issue highlights a broad range of relatively ... (Full abstract text below) Published 2002Dec
in Journal: Brain Cogn
(Language : eng)
Full Pubmed Extract
This information was retrieved, real-time, on your behalf from the public area of the Pubmed website:
1. Brain Cogn.
2002 Dec;50(3):341-4
Neuroethics: an emerging new discipline in the study of brain and cognition.
Illes J, Raffin TA
Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, 701 Welch Road, Palo Alto, CA 94304-5748, USA. illes@stanford.edu
The vision for the special issue in Brain and Cognition is rooted in the need to bring to the foreground the state of scientific knowledge in research and clinical neuroimaging ethics. To this end, the issue highlights a broad range of relatively unexplored ethical challenges in functional neuroimaging with MR, alone or in combination with other neuroimaging modalities, from imaging the central nervous system of the fetus in utero through neural activation patterns associated with cognition and behavior in childhood and in adulthood. Theoretical, practical, and ethical considerations at the heart of imaging healthy research subjects and cognitively compromised patients are explored.
PMID : 12480481 [PubMed - Indexed for MEDLINE]
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Full Author Information
| First Name | LastName | Initials |
| Judy | Illes | J |
| Thomas A | Raffin | TA |
Affiliation: Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, 701 Welch Road, Palo Alto, CA 94304-5748, USA. illes@stanford.edu
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MESH categories and related page links
This article was linked to the MESH categories shown on the left below. The links on the right are related Memletics pages.
Category links from this article:- Brain - anatomy & histology, physiology
- Cognition - physiology
- Diagnostic Imaging - ethics
- Humans
- Magnetic Resonance Imaging
- Neuropsychology - ethics
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