| Literature DB >> 21526115 |
Alex Garnett1, Louise Whiteley, Heather Piwowar, Edie Rasmussen, Judy Illes.
Abstract
Human functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) informs the understanding of the neural basis of mental function and is a key domain of ethical enquiry. It raises questions about the practice and implications of research, and reflexively informs ethics through the empirical investigation of moral judgments. It is at the centre of debate surrounding the importance of neuroscience findings for concepts such as personhood and free will, and the extent of their practical consequences. Here, we map the landscape of fMRI and neuroethics, using citation analysis to uncover salient topics. We find that this landscape is sparsely populated: despite previous calls for debate, there are few articles that discuss both fMRI and ethical, legal, or social implications (ELSI), and even fewer direct citations between the two literatures. Recognizing that practical barriers exist to integrating ELSI discussion into the research literature, we argue nonetheless that the ethical challenges of fMRI, and controversy over its conceptual and practical implications, make this essential.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21526115 PMCID: PMC3081297 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0018537
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Research Questions and Data Sets.
| Research Questions | Data Set |
| Is discussion of the ethics issues surrounding fMRI taking place, and if is it described using the term “neuroethics”? | Academic papers containing permutations of the phrases “functional magnetic resonance imaging,” “ethics,” “neuroethics” Source: PubMed. |
| What are the salient topics among articles discussing both fMRI research and ethical, legal, and social issues? | Academic papers containing permutations of the phrases “functional magnetic resonance imaging,” “ethics,” “legal” (see |
| Are fMRI articles, and those discussing ethical, legal, and social issues, citing each other? | Original fMRI research articles, based on detailed machine-derived query and manual curation. Source: PubMed.ELSI research articles, based on detailed query. Source: Scopus. |
Figure 1Prevalence of neuroethics publications, 1999–2009.
Figure 2Content analysis of neuroethics publications and citation contexts.
Figure 3Citation network of neuroethics publications with topic clustering.