fMRI Lie Detection Hearing Ended, Decision Still to Come
May 14,2010
URL: http://news.sciencemag.org/scienceinsider/2010/05/fmri-lie-detection-hearing-ends-.html
What's your opinion on this matter?
Personally I believe that this poses a substantial danger in that if it is proven sufficiently reliable, the accused could not refuse the brain-scan unlike a polygraph. With the direction civil-rights have taken over the past decade, I think the last thing we need is the thought police.
CuttingEdge100
BTW: Since I posted a response on the site, I did not plagiarize what was said, as I was the one who said it.
May 14,2010
URL: http://news.sciencemag.org/scienceinsider/2010/05/fmri-lie-detection-hearing-ends-.html
A federal court in Tennessee heard arguments yesterday and today on whether lie detection technology based on fMRI scans of brain activity should be admitted in a criminal case involving a psychologist accused of defrauding Medicare. Magistrate Judge Tu Pham presided over the pretrial hearing and could issue his report anytime between now and 1 June, when the trial begins.
The hearing provided the most formal legal test yet of whether fMRI lie detection meets the so-called Daubert standard for admitting evidence in federal court, and as such it could set an important precedent.
What's your opinion on this matter?
Personally I believe that this poses a substantial danger in that if it is proven sufficiently reliable, the accused could not refuse the brain-scan unlike a polygraph. With the direction civil-rights have taken over the past decade, I think the last thing we need is the thought police.
CuttingEdge100
BTW: Since I posted a response on the site, I did not plagiarize what was said, as I was the one who said it.