Brain and crime /
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
---|---|
Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam, Netherlands :
Elsevier,
2023.
|
Colección: | Handbook of clinical neurology ;
v. 197. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Intro
- Brain and Crime
- Copyright
- Handbook of Clinical Neurology 3rd Series
- Foreword
- Preface
- Reference
- Contributors
- Contents
- Section I: Introduction
- Chapter 1: Introduction: On brain and crime
- Introduction and Preliminary Remarks
- Developmental Perspectives on Nonadaptive Behavior
- Theoretical models
- Emotion and empathy
- Executive functioning
- Supportive interventions
- Neurolaw
- Concluding Remarks
- Acknowledgment
- References
- Section II: Structure and function
- Chapter 2: Genetics and epigenetics of human aggression*
- Introduction1
- Reviews on the Genetics of Aggression
- Designs in Genetics of Aggression Studies
- Behavioral genetic approaches
- Integrating data on genetics of aggression from molecular genetic studies
- Genetic linkage and candidate gene studies
- Genome-wide association studies
- Epigenome-wide association studies
- Studies of Human Aggression in Other Omics Domains
- Discussion
- Acknowledgments
- References
- Further reading
- Chapter 3: Network localization of antisocial behavior in neurological patients: Evidence and implications
- Introduction
- Evidence for Network Localization in Neurological Patients With Acquired Antisocial Behavior
- Focal brain lesions
- Frontotemporal dementia
- Huntington disease
- Parkinson disease patients with impulsive behaviors due to dopamine agonists
- Implications of Network Localization of Antisocial Behavior
- Implications for understanding psychopathy
- Implications of rehabilitation of criminal behavior
- Implications for moral and legal responsibility in persons with criminal behavior
- Neurology and the Law: Forensic Implications
- Conclusions
- References
- Chapter 4: Prison and the brain
- Introduction
- Executive Functioning and Prefrontal Cortex
- EF and prefrontal cortex in offenders
- Environmental Enrichment and the Brain
- Enriched environment and brain plasticity
- Enriched environment and the prefrontal cortex
- Physical activity
- Cognitive challenges
- Social interaction
- Prison, an Impoverished Environment, and Its Influence on the Brain
- Impoverishment on the three ``pillars��
- Disturbed sleep and stress
- Extreme impoverishment: Solitary confinement
- Effects of imprisonment on brain function
- Is It Possible to Enrich the Prison Environment?
- Enrichment across the three pillars
- Physical activity
- Cognitive challenges
- Social interaction
- Increasing autonomy and decreasing stress
- An extraordinary example of an enriched prison environment: Bast�y
- Conclusions
- References
- Chapter 5: Forensically relevant challenging behaviors and the genetics domain
- Introduction
- Relevant Issues in the Gene-Context Relation
- Hypothesis on monoamine oxidase A
- Lessons learned from epileptic phenomena
- Rett syndrome
- Hypothalamic hamartoma