Using fMRI to Understand the Link Between Risk and Criminal Activity

A study published in theJournal of Experimental Psychologyis using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to draw the correlation between the attraction toward risk and criminal activity.Valerie Reyna, PhD, director of both the Human Neuroscience Institute and the Magnetic Resonance Imaging Facility at Cornell University, and her colleagues relied on the theory that non-criminals tend to avoid risk when they ’re likely going to win or achieve something, and they pursue risky options when they’re probably going to lose. Yet, based on their findings, criminals demonstrate opposite behavior, and tend to take riskier chances when they’re going to win.For their study, the researchers used fuzzy-trace based risky-choice framing tasks, a practice that evaluates the relationship between mental representations and decision making, with a mixed group of participants who had both “self-reported criminal or noncriminal tendencies,”accordingto theCornell Chronicle.The participantswere given two options: take $20 or gamble with a coin flip to win $40 and take nothing. Previous studies show that most people will grab the 20 bucks. However, Dr. Reyna and her researchers found that those who are drawn to criminal activity had a higher instance of selecting the gamble.To analyze their activity, the researchers examined brain activation through fMRI. They discovered that criminal tendencies were linked to “greater activation in temporal and parietal cortices,” the regions of the brain u...
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