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Brain Scans

Anne Reed brings us this post, which clearly fits into the “science” part of The Art and Science of Criminal Defense Trial Lawyering. Researchers in psychology discovered, by using an MRI tracking the brain activity of subjects reading text on a screen, that the brain spontaneously divides read text into discrete “events” in the same places that we would consciously do so (here is the article).

It appears that, before this study, psychologists believed that this phenomenon, “event structure perception,” was limited to visual inputs. The brain activity evidence of event structure perception in reading suggests, according to the paper, that there is a “larger system involved in the comprehension of everyday activities that may be modality independent (i.e., involved in comprehending real-world visual events as well as narrated descriptions of those events).”

So what do we trial lawyers do with this? There are a lot more questions to be answered before we can know for sure (for example, how does the brain respond to events of certain durations or other patterns? how many different narrative threads can the brain keep track of at a time?), but it seems reasonable to play to our jurors’ strengths by:

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