Evidence of defendants’ adverse childhood experiences can elicit jurors’ leniency in capital trials

Evidence of defendants’ adverse childhood experiences can elicit jurors’ leniency in capital trials

[ad_1] Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are potentially traumatic events that occur from birth to age 17. A new study examined the effect of ACEs on jurors’ sentencing decisions in hypothetical death penalty cases. The study found that defense testimony elicited jurors’ leniency, largely through their responses to ACE evidence. The study,…

How Do Scientists Measure Brain Activity?

How Do Scientists Measure Brain Activity?

[ad_1] What gives rise to our conscious experiences? The so-called hard problem, popularized by the philosopher David Chalmers in 1995, asks how the inanimate neural substrates of the brain create vivid first-person conscious experiences. In other words, how the combined firings of our neurons elicit the inner subjective universe we all possess.  Anil Seth, one…