TY - JOUR PY - 2018// TI - The captive brain: torture and the neuroscience of humane interrogation JO - QJM: Journal of the Association of Physicians of Great Britain and Ireland A1 - O'Mara, Shane SP - 73 EP - 78 VL - 111 IS - 2 N2 - Despite it being abhorrent and illegal, torture is sometimes employed for information gathering. However, the extreme stressors employed during torture force the brain away from the relatively narrow, adaptive range of function it operates within. Torture degrades signal-to-noise ratios of information yield, and increases false positive discovery rates. As a discovery methodology, torture fails basic tests of veridical, reliable, and replicable information discovery. Torture fails during interrogation because it is an assault on our core integrated, social, psychological, and neural functioning. There is a need for a profound cultural shift regarding torture, recognising that torture impairs, rather than facilitates, investigations and truth-finding. Rising to this challenge will increase operational effectiveness, eliminate prisoner abuse and torment, and aid veridical and actionable information gathering. Policy regarding prisoner and detainee interrogation need to be refocused as a behavioral and brain sciences problem, and not simply treated as a legal, ethical or philosophical problem. Getting the science, ethics and practice in line is a challenge, but it can and should be done.

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Language: en

LA - en SN - 1460-2725 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/qjmed/hcx252 ID - ref1 ER -