Neuroethics
Anticipating the Future
Herausgeber: Illes, Judy
Neuroethics
Anticipating the Future
Herausgeber: Illes, Judy
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Over the last decade, there have been unparalleled advances in our understanding of brain sciences. In this volume on neuroethics, a distinguished group of contributors from a range of disciplines discuss the ethical implications of this newfound knowledge and set out the many necessary considerations for the future.
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Over the last decade, there have been unparalleled advances in our understanding of brain sciences. In this volume on neuroethics, a distinguished group of contributors from a range of disciplines discuss the ethical implications of this newfound knowledge and set out the many necessary considerations for the future.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 688
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. September 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 249mm x 173mm x 46mm
- Gewicht: 1402g
- ISBN-13: 9780198786832
- ISBN-10: 0198786832
- Artikelnr.: 48852859
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 688
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. September 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 249mm x 173mm x 46mm
- Gewicht: 1402g
- ISBN-13: 9780198786832
- ISBN-10: 0198786832
- Artikelnr.: 48852859
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Dr. Judy Illes is a pioneer and a global leader in the field of neuroethics. As a neuroscientist turned neuroscientist-neuroethicist, she has made groundbreaking contributions to ethical, social, and policy challenges at the intersection of biomedical ethics and neuroscience. Her seminal contributions to tackling challenges in neuroimaging, neurodevelopment and aging, addiction and mental health, regenerative medicine, cross-cultural studies, and the commercialization of health care, have had a transformative impact in the way that research is designed and executed, and results and new knowledge shared with the public and decision-makers. She is President of the International Neuroethics Society, a member of the Standing Committee on Ethics for the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, and internationally recognized author, collaborator, and mentor.
* I. Neurotechnology: Today and Tomorrow
* 1: Debra J.H. Mathews: When Emerging Biomedical Technologies Converge
or Collide
* 2: Urs Ribary, Alex L. Mackay, Alex Rauscher, Christine M. Tipper,
Deborah E. Giaschi, Todd S. Woodward, Vesna Sossi, Sam M. Doesburg,
Lawrence M. Ward, Anthony Herdman, Ghassan Hamarneh, Brian G. Booth,
and Alexander Moiseev: Emerging Neuroimaging Technologies: Towards
Future Personalized Diagnostics, Prognosis, Targeted Intervention and
Ethical Challenges
* 3: Lorna M. Gibson, Cathie L.M. Sudlow, Joanna M. Wardlaw: Incidental
Findings: Current Ethical Debates and Future Challenges in Advanced
Neuroimaging
* 4: Niranjan S. Karnik: Vulnerability, Youth and Homelessness: Ethical
Considerations on the Roles of Technology in the Lives of Adolescents
and Young Adults
* 5: Karola V. Kreitmair and Mildred K. Cho: The Neuroethical Future of
Wearable and Mobile Health Technology
* 6: Peter B. Reiner and Saskia K. Nagel: Technologies of the Extended
Mind
* 7: Eran Klein: Neuromodulation Ethics: Preparing for Brain-computer
Interface Medicine
* 8: Khara M. Ramos and Walter J. Koroshetz: Integrating Ethics into
Neurotechnology Research and Development: The USA National Institutes
of Health BRAIN Initiative
* II. Neuroethics at the Frontline of Healthcare
* 9: Cheryl D. Lew: What Do New Neuroscience Discoveries in Children
Mean for Their Open Future?
* 10: Sarah Welsh, Genevieve Dupont-Thibodeau, Matthew P. Kirschen:
Neuroprognostication after Severe Brain Injuryin Children: Science
Fiction or Plausible Reality?
* 11: Elvira V. Lang: No Pain No Gain: A Neuroethical Place for
Hypnosis in Invasive Intervention
* 12: Karen S. Rommelfanger: Placebo Beyond Controls: The Neuroscience
and Ethics of Navigating a New Understanding of Placebo Therapy
* 13: Sabine Müller: Ethical Challenges of Modern Psychiatric
Neurosurgery
* 14: Shelly Benjaminy and Anthony Traboulsee: At the Crossroads of
Civic Engagement and Evidence-Based Medicine: Lessons Learned from
the Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency Experience
* 15: Agnieszka Jaworska: Ethical Dilemmas in Neurodegenerative
Disease: Respecting Patients at the Twilight of Agency
* 16: Hervé Chneiweiss: Anticipating a Therapeutically Elusive
Neurodegenerative Condition: Ethical Considerations for the
Preclinical Detection of Alzheimer's Disease
* 17: David B. Fischer, Robert D. Truog: When Bright Lines Blur:
Deconstructing Distinctions Between Disorders of Consciousness
* 18: James L. Bernat: Brain Death and the Definition of Death
* III. Social, Legal and Regulatory Frameworks: Lessons of the Past
Guide Policy for the Future
* 19: Vasiliki Rahimzadeh, Karine Sénécal, Erika Kleiderman, Bartha M.
Knoppers: Minors and Incompetent Adults: A Tale of Two Populations
* 20: Eric Racine and Veljko Dubljevi: Behavioral and Brain-based
Research on Free Moral Agency: Threatening or Empowering?
* 21: Fabrice Jotterand: Cognitive Enhancement of Today May Be the
Normal of Tomorrow
* 22: Laura Y. Cabrera: Environmental Neuroethics: Setting the
Foundations
* 23: Jordan Tesluk, Judy Illes, Ralph Matthews: First Nations and
Environmental Neuroethics: Perspectives on Brain Health from a World
of Change
* 24: Steven E. Hyman: The Neurobiology of Addiction as a Window on
Voluntary Control of Behavior and Moral Responsibility
* 25: Adrian Carter and Wayne Hall: Looking to the Future: Clinical and
Policy Implications of a Brain Disease Model of Addiction
* 26: Brad Partridge and Wayne Hall: Concussion, Neuroethics, and
Sport: Policies of the Past Do Not Suffice for the Future
* 27: Jonathan Moreno, Michael N. Tennison, and James Giordano:
Security Threat Versus Aggregated Truths: Ethical Issues in the Use
of Neuroscience and Neurotechnology for National Security
* 28: Julie M. Robillard and Emily Wight: Communicating About the Brain
in the Digital Era
* 29: Jennifer A. Chandler: The Impact of Neuroscience in the Law: How
Perceptions of Control and Responsibility Affect the Definition of
Disability
* 30: Dan J. Stein and James Giordano: Neuroethics and Global Mental
Health: Establishing a Dialogue
* IV. Epilogue
* 31: Joseph J. Fins: Neuroethics and Neurotechnology: Instrumentality
and Human Rights
* 1: Debra J.H. Mathews: When Emerging Biomedical Technologies Converge
or Collide
* 2: Urs Ribary, Alex L. Mackay, Alex Rauscher, Christine M. Tipper,
Deborah E. Giaschi, Todd S. Woodward, Vesna Sossi, Sam M. Doesburg,
Lawrence M. Ward, Anthony Herdman, Ghassan Hamarneh, Brian G. Booth,
and Alexander Moiseev: Emerging Neuroimaging Technologies: Towards
Future Personalized Diagnostics, Prognosis, Targeted Intervention and
Ethical Challenges
* 3: Lorna M. Gibson, Cathie L.M. Sudlow, Joanna M. Wardlaw: Incidental
Findings: Current Ethical Debates and Future Challenges in Advanced
Neuroimaging
* 4: Niranjan S. Karnik: Vulnerability, Youth and Homelessness: Ethical
Considerations on the Roles of Technology in the Lives of Adolescents
and Young Adults
* 5: Karola V. Kreitmair and Mildred K. Cho: The Neuroethical Future of
Wearable and Mobile Health Technology
* 6: Peter B. Reiner and Saskia K. Nagel: Technologies of the Extended
Mind
* 7: Eran Klein: Neuromodulation Ethics: Preparing for Brain-computer
Interface Medicine
* 8: Khara M. Ramos and Walter J. Koroshetz: Integrating Ethics into
Neurotechnology Research and Development: The USA National Institutes
of Health BRAIN Initiative
* II. Neuroethics at the Frontline of Healthcare
* 9: Cheryl D. Lew: What Do New Neuroscience Discoveries in Children
Mean for Their Open Future?
* 10: Sarah Welsh, Genevieve Dupont-Thibodeau, Matthew P. Kirschen:
Neuroprognostication after Severe Brain Injuryin Children: Science
Fiction or Plausible Reality?
* 11: Elvira V. Lang: No Pain No Gain: A Neuroethical Place for
Hypnosis in Invasive Intervention
* 12: Karen S. Rommelfanger: Placebo Beyond Controls: The Neuroscience
and Ethics of Navigating a New Understanding of Placebo Therapy
* 13: Sabine Müller: Ethical Challenges of Modern Psychiatric
Neurosurgery
* 14: Shelly Benjaminy and Anthony Traboulsee: At the Crossroads of
Civic Engagement and Evidence-Based Medicine: Lessons Learned from
the Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency Experience
* 15: Agnieszka Jaworska: Ethical Dilemmas in Neurodegenerative
Disease: Respecting Patients at the Twilight of Agency
* 16: Hervé Chneiweiss: Anticipating a Therapeutically Elusive
Neurodegenerative Condition: Ethical Considerations for the
Preclinical Detection of Alzheimer's Disease
* 17: David B. Fischer, Robert D. Truog: When Bright Lines Blur:
Deconstructing Distinctions Between Disorders of Consciousness
* 18: James L. Bernat: Brain Death and the Definition of Death
* III. Social, Legal and Regulatory Frameworks: Lessons of the Past
Guide Policy for the Future
* 19: Vasiliki Rahimzadeh, Karine Sénécal, Erika Kleiderman, Bartha M.
Knoppers: Minors and Incompetent Adults: A Tale of Two Populations
* 20: Eric Racine and Veljko Dubljevi: Behavioral and Brain-based
Research on Free Moral Agency: Threatening or Empowering?
* 21: Fabrice Jotterand: Cognitive Enhancement of Today May Be the
Normal of Tomorrow
* 22: Laura Y. Cabrera: Environmental Neuroethics: Setting the
Foundations
* 23: Jordan Tesluk, Judy Illes, Ralph Matthews: First Nations and
Environmental Neuroethics: Perspectives on Brain Health from a World
of Change
* 24: Steven E. Hyman: The Neurobiology of Addiction as a Window on
Voluntary Control of Behavior and Moral Responsibility
* 25: Adrian Carter and Wayne Hall: Looking to the Future: Clinical and
Policy Implications of a Brain Disease Model of Addiction
* 26: Brad Partridge and Wayne Hall: Concussion, Neuroethics, and
Sport: Policies of the Past Do Not Suffice for the Future
* 27: Jonathan Moreno, Michael N. Tennison, and James Giordano:
Security Threat Versus Aggregated Truths: Ethical Issues in the Use
of Neuroscience and Neurotechnology for National Security
* 28: Julie M. Robillard and Emily Wight: Communicating About the Brain
in the Digital Era
* 29: Jennifer A. Chandler: The Impact of Neuroscience in the Law: How
Perceptions of Control and Responsibility Affect the Definition of
Disability
* 30: Dan J. Stein and James Giordano: Neuroethics and Global Mental
Health: Establishing a Dialogue
* IV. Epilogue
* 31: Joseph J. Fins: Neuroethics and Neurotechnology: Instrumentality
and Human Rights
* I. Neurotechnology: Today and Tomorrow
* 1: Debra J.H. Mathews: When Emerging Biomedical Technologies Converge
or Collide
* 2: Urs Ribary, Alex L. Mackay, Alex Rauscher, Christine M. Tipper,
Deborah E. Giaschi, Todd S. Woodward, Vesna Sossi, Sam M. Doesburg,
Lawrence M. Ward, Anthony Herdman, Ghassan Hamarneh, Brian G. Booth,
and Alexander Moiseev: Emerging Neuroimaging Technologies: Towards
Future Personalized Diagnostics, Prognosis, Targeted Intervention and
Ethical Challenges
* 3: Lorna M. Gibson, Cathie L.M. Sudlow, Joanna M. Wardlaw: Incidental
Findings: Current Ethical Debates and Future Challenges in Advanced
Neuroimaging
* 4: Niranjan S. Karnik: Vulnerability, Youth and Homelessness: Ethical
Considerations on the Roles of Technology in the Lives of Adolescents
and Young Adults
* 5: Karola V. Kreitmair and Mildred K. Cho: The Neuroethical Future of
Wearable and Mobile Health Technology
* 6: Peter B. Reiner and Saskia K. Nagel: Technologies of the Extended
Mind
* 7: Eran Klein: Neuromodulation Ethics: Preparing for Brain-computer
Interface Medicine
* 8: Khara M. Ramos and Walter J. Koroshetz: Integrating Ethics into
Neurotechnology Research and Development: The USA National Institutes
of Health BRAIN Initiative
* II. Neuroethics at the Frontline of Healthcare
* 9: Cheryl D. Lew: What Do New Neuroscience Discoveries in Children
Mean for Their Open Future?
* 10: Sarah Welsh, Genevieve Dupont-Thibodeau, Matthew P. Kirschen:
Neuroprognostication after Severe Brain Injuryin Children: Science
Fiction or Plausible Reality?
* 11: Elvira V. Lang: No Pain No Gain: A Neuroethical Place for
Hypnosis in Invasive Intervention
* 12: Karen S. Rommelfanger: Placebo Beyond Controls: The Neuroscience
and Ethics of Navigating a New Understanding of Placebo Therapy
* 13: Sabine Müller: Ethical Challenges of Modern Psychiatric
Neurosurgery
* 14: Shelly Benjaminy and Anthony Traboulsee: At the Crossroads of
Civic Engagement and Evidence-Based Medicine: Lessons Learned from
the Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency Experience
* 15: Agnieszka Jaworska: Ethical Dilemmas in Neurodegenerative
Disease: Respecting Patients at the Twilight of Agency
* 16: Hervé Chneiweiss: Anticipating a Therapeutically Elusive
Neurodegenerative Condition: Ethical Considerations for the
Preclinical Detection of Alzheimer's Disease
* 17: David B. Fischer, Robert D. Truog: When Bright Lines Blur:
Deconstructing Distinctions Between Disorders of Consciousness
* 18: James L. Bernat: Brain Death and the Definition of Death
* III. Social, Legal and Regulatory Frameworks: Lessons of the Past
Guide Policy for the Future
* 19: Vasiliki Rahimzadeh, Karine Sénécal, Erika Kleiderman, Bartha M.
Knoppers: Minors and Incompetent Adults: A Tale of Two Populations
* 20: Eric Racine and Veljko Dubljevi: Behavioral and Brain-based
Research on Free Moral Agency: Threatening or Empowering?
* 21: Fabrice Jotterand: Cognitive Enhancement of Today May Be the
Normal of Tomorrow
* 22: Laura Y. Cabrera: Environmental Neuroethics: Setting the
Foundations
* 23: Jordan Tesluk, Judy Illes, Ralph Matthews: First Nations and
Environmental Neuroethics: Perspectives on Brain Health from a World
of Change
* 24: Steven E. Hyman: The Neurobiology of Addiction as a Window on
Voluntary Control of Behavior and Moral Responsibility
* 25: Adrian Carter and Wayne Hall: Looking to the Future: Clinical and
Policy Implications of a Brain Disease Model of Addiction
* 26: Brad Partridge and Wayne Hall: Concussion, Neuroethics, and
Sport: Policies of the Past Do Not Suffice for the Future
* 27: Jonathan Moreno, Michael N. Tennison, and James Giordano:
Security Threat Versus Aggregated Truths: Ethical Issues in the Use
of Neuroscience and Neurotechnology for National Security
* 28: Julie M. Robillard and Emily Wight: Communicating About the Brain
in the Digital Era
* 29: Jennifer A. Chandler: The Impact of Neuroscience in the Law: How
Perceptions of Control and Responsibility Affect the Definition of
Disability
* 30: Dan J. Stein and James Giordano: Neuroethics and Global Mental
Health: Establishing a Dialogue
* IV. Epilogue
* 31: Joseph J. Fins: Neuroethics and Neurotechnology: Instrumentality
and Human Rights
* 1: Debra J.H. Mathews: When Emerging Biomedical Technologies Converge
or Collide
* 2: Urs Ribary, Alex L. Mackay, Alex Rauscher, Christine M. Tipper,
Deborah E. Giaschi, Todd S. Woodward, Vesna Sossi, Sam M. Doesburg,
Lawrence M. Ward, Anthony Herdman, Ghassan Hamarneh, Brian G. Booth,
and Alexander Moiseev: Emerging Neuroimaging Technologies: Towards
Future Personalized Diagnostics, Prognosis, Targeted Intervention and
Ethical Challenges
* 3: Lorna M. Gibson, Cathie L.M. Sudlow, Joanna M. Wardlaw: Incidental
Findings: Current Ethical Debates and Future Challenges in Advanced
Neuroimaging
* 4: Niranjan S. Karnik: Vulnerability, Youth and Homelessness: Ethical
Considerations on the Roles of Technology in the Lives of Adolescents
and Young Adults
* 5: Karola V. Kreitmair and Mildred K. Cho: The Neuroethical Future of
Wearable and Mobile Health Technology
* 6: Peter B. Reiner and Saskia K. Nagel: Technologies of the Extended
Mind
* 7: Eran Klein: Neuromodulation Ethics: Preparing for Brain-computer
Interface Medicine
* 8: Khara M. Ramos and Walter J. Koroshetz: Integrating Ethics into
Neurotechnology Research and Development: The USA National Institutes
of Health BRAIN Initiative
* II. Neuroethics at the Frontline of Healthcare
* 9: Cheryl D. Lew: What Do New Neuroscience Discoveries in Children
Mean for Their Open Future?
* 10: Sarah Welsh, Genevieve Dupont-Thibodeau, Matthew P. Kirschen:
Neuroprognostication after Severe Brain Injuryin Children: Science
Fiction or Plausible Reality?
* 11: Elvira V. Lang: No Pain No Gain: A Neuroethical Place for
Hypnosis in Invasive Intervention
* 12: Karen S. Rommelfanger: Placebo Beyond Controls: The Neuroscience
and Ethics of Navigating a New Understanding of Placebo Therapy
* 13: Sabine Müller: Ethical Challenges of Modern Psychiatric
Neurosurgery
* 14: Shelly Benjaminy and Anthony Traboulsee: At the Crossroads of
Civic Engagement and Evidence-Based Medicine: Lessons Learned from
the Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency Experience
* 15: Agnieszka Jaworska: Ethical Dilemmas in Neurodegenerative
Disease: Respecting Patients at the Twilight of Agency
* 16: Hervé Chneiweiss: Anticipating a Therapeutically Elusive
Neurodegenerative Condition: Ethical Considerations for the
Preclinical Detection of Alzheimer's Disease
* 17: David B. Fischer, Robert D. Truog: When Bright Lines Blur:
Deconstructing Distinctions Between Disorders of Consciousness
* 18: James L. Bernat: Brain Death and the Definition of Death
* III. Social, Legal and Regulatory Frameworks: Lessons of the Past
Guide Policy for the Future
* 19: Vasiliki Rahimzadeh, Karine Sénécal, Erika Kleiderman, Bartha M.
Knoppers: Minors and Incompetent Adults: A Tale of Two Populations
* 20: Eric Racine and Veljko Dubljevi: Behavioral and Brain-based
Research on Free Moral Agency: Threatening or Empowering?
* 21: Fabrice Jotterand: Cognitive Enhancement of Today May Be the
Normal of Tomorrow
* 22: Laura Y. Cabrera: Environmental Neuroethics: Setting the
Foundations
* 23: Jordan Tesluk, Judy Illes, Ralph Matthews: First Nations and
Environmental Neuroethics: Perspectives on Brain Health from a World
of Change
* 24: Steven E. Hyman: The Neurobiology of Addiction as a Window on
Voluntary Control of Behavior and Moral Responsibility
* 25: Adrian Carter and Wayne Hall: Looking to the Future: Clinical and
Policy Implications of a Brain Disease Model of Addiction
* 26: Brad Partridge and Wayne Hall: Concussion, Neuroethics, and
Sport: Policies of the Past Do Not Suffice for the Future
* 27: Jonathan Moreno, Michael N. Tennison, and James Giordano:
Security Threat Versus Aggregated Truths: Ethical Issues in the Use
of Neuroscience and Neurotechnology for National Security
* 28: Julie M. Robillard and Emily Wight: Communicating About the Brain
in the Digital Era
* 29: Jennifer A. Chandler: The Impact of Neuroscience in the Law: How
Perceptions of Control and Responsibility Affect the Definition of
Disability
* 30: Dan J. Stein and James Giordano: Neuroethics and Global Mental
Health: Establishing a Dialogue
* IV. Epilogue
* 31: Joseph J. Fins: Neuroethics and Neurotechnology: Instrumentality
and Human Rights