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Pencitraan otak dapat membantu memprediksi perilaku masa depan
Scan otak non-invasif telah menyebabkan penemuan ilmu dasar tentang otak manusia , tetapi hanya berdampak terbatas pada kehidupan orang sehari -hari . Sebuah artikel review menyoroti sejumlah studi baru-baru ini menunjukkan bahwa pencitraan otak dapat membantu memprediksi individual learning di masa depan , kriminalitas , perilaku yang berhubungan dengan kesehatan , dan respon terhadap obat atau perawatan perilaku . Teknologi ini dapat menawarkan kesempatan untuk personalisasi pendidikan dan klinis ......read more
Brain imaging
may help predict future behavior
Date:
January 7, 2015
Source:
Cell Press
Summary:
Noninvasive brain
scans have led to basic science discoveries about the human brain, but they've
had only limited impacts on people's day-to-day lives. A review article
highlights a number of recent studies showing that brain imaging can help
predict an individual's future learning, criminality, health-related behaviors,
and response to drug or behavioral treatments. The technology may offer
opportunities to personalize educational and clinical practices.
.........................
noninvasive brain scans,
such as functional magnetic resonance imaging, have led to basic science
discoveries about the human brain, but they've had only limited impacts on
people's day-to-day lives. A review article published in the January 7 issue of
the Cell Press journalNeuron,
however, highlights a number of recent studies showing that brain imaging can
help predict an individual's future learning, criminality, health-related
behaviors, and response to drug or behavioral treatments. The technology may
offer opportunities to personalize educational and clinical practices.
Dr. John Gabrieli of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge
and his colleagues describe the predictive power of brain imaging across a
variety of different future behaviors, including infants' later performance in
reading, students' later performance in math, criminals' likelihood of becoming
repeat offenders, adolescents' future drug and alcohol use, and addicts'
likelihood of relapse.
"Presently, we often wait for failure, in school or in mental health,
to prompt attempts to help, but by then a lot of harm has occurred," says
Dr. Gabrieli. "If we can use neuroimaging to identify individuals at high
risk for future failure, we may be able to help those individuals avoid such
failure altogether."
The authors also point to the clear ethical and societal issues that are
raised by studies attempting to predict individuals' behavior. "We will
need to make sure that knowledge of future behavior is used to personalize
educational and medical practices, and not be used to limit support for
individuals at higher risk of failure," says Dr. Gabrieli. "For
example, rather than simply identifying individuals to be more or less likely
to succeed in a program of education, such information could be used to promote
differentiated education for those less likely to succeed with the standard
education program."
Story Source:
The above story is based on materials provided by Cell Press. Note: Materials may be edited
for content and length.
Journal Reference:
1. John D.E. Gabrieli,
Satrajit S. Ghosh, Susan Whitfield-Gabrieli. Prediction as a
Humanitarian and Pragmatic Contribution from Human Cognitive Neuroscience. Neuron,
2015; 85 (1): 11 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2014.10.047