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Summary PSY3375: all cases

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All cases summarized

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Subido en
4 de febrero de 2025
Número de páginas
52
Escrito en
2022/2023
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SUMMARY PSY3375
All tasks summarized

,TASK 1 – RISK FACTORS FOR ANTISOCIAL/VIOLENT
BEHAVIOUR
DE KOGEL & WESTGEEST (2015). NEUROSCIENTIFIC AND BEHAVIORAL GENETIC
INFORMATION IN CRIMINAL CASES IN THE NETHERLANDS
INTRODUCTION
Most common case themes:
1. Prefrontal brain damage in relation to criminal responsibility and recidivism risk
2. Neurocognitive deficits in addiction for judging criminal responsibility

Neuroscientific information:
- Assessment of the brain with imaging techniques (e.g. MRI, SPECT, PET) or EEG,
neuroendocrinological assessment (e.g. hormones, neuropeptides)
- Neurological assessment
- Referring to a certain neurobiological predisposition or damage of the brain

Behavioral genetic information:
- Heritability assessment (e.g. assessment of specific genes)
- Referring to a ‘genetic predisposition’ or family history that seems to indicate a biological
origin of a particular behavior
- Adoption studies: twins given up for adoption  one grows up in good environment, other
one in a toxic environment.
JUDICIAL QUESTIONS AND CASE EXAMPLES
Neuroscientific or behavioral genetic information can be used to answer judicial questions:
- Can the defendant be considered of diminished accountability for the offense?
- To what extent is the defendant a risk to society?
- Has the defendant intended the unlawful act?
- Was the unlawful act due to guilt/negligence of the offender?
- Is there sufficient evidence to prove beyond doubt that the defendant committed the
offense?
- Is the defendant competent to stand trial?
- Was the defendant subject to excessive self-defence?

When is neuroscientific evidence used?
- When one wants to judge whether the evidence that the defendant has committed the
crime is reliable or not
o Evidence of committing the crime – reliability of statements
o E.g. is someone’s statement reliable? Can someone with retrograde and anterograde
amnesia suddenly remember what happened 3 years before?
o Often experts disagree and expert statements are looked at by other experts
- To find out whether the defendant is competent to stand trial
o Competency to stand trial
o E.g. one defendant suffered from previous cerebral haemorrhage and infarction
causing impairments in orientation, attention, language, memory, executive control,
etc.  he was not able to understand the prosecution against him
- To find out whether the defendant was aware of committing the acts
o Intent or guilt
o E.g. a woman shoot people while being asleep  frontal cortex activity is reduced
during first phase of deep sleep leading to automatic behaviour  different sleep
disorders may relate to cases like this

, - To answer the question to what extent can the defendant be held accountable?
o Accountability
o E.g. damage to the pre-frontal brain may lead to impulsivity and an inability to control
impulses, lack of self-reflection
- When neurobiological deficits may be contributing to criminal recidivism risk
o Recidivism risk
o E.g. man becomes a stalker and dure to brain damage reducing impulse control and
intellectual ability the risk of recidivism is high
- To better understand the mechanisms of obstacles to self-control in addicted persons
o Addiction and accountability
o In NL, the most common way to look at offenders who committed offense while
intoxicated by alcohol or other addictive substances is by the ‘Culpa in causa’ principle
 Culpa in cause is used in criminal law to indicate that someone ended up in a
situation that results in an unlawful act because of his/her own fault and
therefore is responsible for it
 Whereas in criminal law addiction seems more as a choice, in the medical
sector addiction is seen as a (brain) disease
o E.g. neuropsychological testing may provide objective measures of or instance hyper-
responsiveness to substance-related stimuli and help identify those addicts who have
such severe problems with self-control that they should be considered of diminished
responsibility
- To argue that head injuries / brain damage may lead to the defendant being extra
vulnerable to duress and excessive self-defence
o Duress of excessive self-defence
o E.g. in the context of self-defence the defendant with head injury may be extra
vulnerable for a state in which strong emotions prevail

Guidelines and protocols for using neuroscientific information in criminal cases is needed
- Would serve to articulate the state of knowledge, and the ways in which neuroscientific
information can and cannot be used
- Would prevent biases in the assessments of experts, e.g. MRI’s are sensitive to:
o Pathology bias: the inclination of clinicians to see deviance because its suggested by
the context
o Allegiance bias: the assessments are biased in a certain direction dependent on the
process party that hired the expert
o Malingering: for instance the faking of test results by the defendant.
- Blinding of the expert to context variables (e.g. defendant’s background) and symptom
validity testing (to assess malingering) = essential components of a protocol

When is behavioral genetic information used?
- To mention the role of heritable factors in the ethology of mental disorder
o Experts use this information (and other factors, e.g. problematic family conditions) to
explain how the disorder and the problematic behavior may have come about)
- To mention the influence of the MAOA gene on aggressive behaviour
o One expert disagrees: Morse argues that evidence of a causal relationship between a
genetic variant and an elevated proneness to impulse aggression should not be
equalled to an excusing condition  only if independent evidence would show that
the ability of the defendant to control strong emotions is reduced could there be an
excusing condition.
CONCLUDING REMARKS

, - Neuroscientific information may function as a double-edged sword; it could be used to
diminish someone’s accountability (thereby reducing sentence) or it can show that the
defendant is a risk for society (even when accountability reduced, can lead to longer
sentence)
- Neuroscientific information is one of the components of a larger picture
- Cases are diverse, several themes appear  prefrontal brain damage


GLENN & RAINE (2014). NEUROCRIMINOLOGY: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE PUNISHMENT,
PREDICTION AND PREVENTION OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR
THE CURRENT STATE OF NEUROCIMINOLOGY
Neurocriminology = applies techniques and principles from neurosciences to improve understanding
of crime  to predict and prevent crime
- Could lead to violence reduction
- Raises neuroethical concerns

Genetics
- Antisocial and aggressive behavior have a considerable genetic basis (concluded in twin and
adoption studies)
o Variance due to genetics between 40-60%
- Heritable influences are broadly consistent across gender and ethnicity
- Several genetic variants that increase the risk of antisocial behavior have been identified
o None of them have been significant in meta-analysis
- Genes do not operate in isolation  important to consider context in which genes are active
o Influence of a single gene on aggression is small  larger number of gene variants
may increase risk of aggressive behavior
- Gene-environment (G x E) interactions can increase risk for antisocial behavior and/or
produce epigenetic changes within individuals
o Genes only get active when they get triggered
- Specific genes:
o Genes implicated in serotonergic and catecholaminergic neurobiological systems
o Monoamine oxidase A (MAOA) gene  in combination with toxic childhood, this gene
will increase chance for antisocial/criminal behavior
- Knowledge about individual genes may prove to be useful in improving our understanding of
the mechanisms and pathways that increase the risk of antisocial behavior
- Epigenetics: environment is equally important  environmental factors influence how genes
are functionally expressed
- Having a biological parent convicted of a violent crime raises the likelihood of criminal
violence in the adoptee

Prental and perinatal influences
- Early health risk factors, sometimes together with social risk factors, are linked to an
increased probability that a young infant will develop antisocial and aggressive behavior
o Birth compilations, in combination with maternal rejection in the first year of life, are
associated with externalizing behaviour (aggression, delinquency and hyperactivity)
o Fetal maldevelopment during the second trimester has been associated with later
violent delinquency and violent offending in adulthood
 Even more pronounced together with e.g. poor parenting
o Alcohol and nicotine consumption during pregnancy associated with increased
childhood aggression in the offspring
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