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Brain ImagingA Decade of Coverage in the Print MediaInstitut de Recherches Cliniques de Montréal Québec, Canada
Stanford University, Palo Alto, California Dominican University of California, San Rafael
Stanford University, Palo Alto, California, illes{at}stanford.edu Advances in neuroscience are increasingly intersecting with issues of ethical, legal, and social interest. This study is an analysis of press coverage of an advanced technology for brain imaging, functional magnetic resonance imaging, that has gained significant public visibility over the past ten years. Discussion of issues of scientific validity and interpretation dominated over ethical content in both the popular and specialized press. Coverage of research on higher order cognitive phenomena specifically attributed broad personal and societal meaning to neuroimages. The authors conclude that neuroscience provides an ideal model for exploring science communication and ethics in a multicultural context.
Key Words: neuroethics functional magnetic resonance imaging press neuroscience content analysis bioethics
Science Communication, Vol. 28, No. 1,
122-143 (2006) |
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