The subjective brain, identity, and neuroethics

scientific article published in September 2009

The subjective brain, identity, and neuroethics is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1080/15265160903090058
P698PubMed publication ID19998179

P2093author name stringGrant R Gillett
P2860cites workOf human bonding: newborns prefer their mothers' voices.Q34285872
Medical aspects of the persistent vegetative state (1).Q34315751
Brain birth and personal identityQ42276582
Unconscious cerebral initiative and the role of conscious will in voluntary actionQ55878864
P433issue9
P921main subjectneuroethicsQ186272
P1104number of pages9
P304page(s)5-13
P577publication date2009-09-01
P1433published inAmerican Journal of BioethicsQ4744234
P1476titleThe subjective brain, identity, and neuroethics
P478volume9

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q34973070"This is Why you've Been Suffering": Reflections of Providers on Neuroimaging in Mental Health Care
Q57660273A Descriptive Social Neuroethics is Needed to Reveal Lived Identities
Q48383792Brain, body, and society: bioethical reflections on socio-historical neuroscience and neuro-corporeal social science
Q48383774From the subjective brain to the situated person
Q57990093On the Erroneous Conflation of Opiophobia and the Undertreatment of Pain
Q58253506Selected Abstracts From the 2013 International Neuroethics Society Annual Meeting
Q57989660Skills, Dementia, and Bridging Divides in Neuroscience
Q33517648Stigma and addiction: being and becoming
Q57988868Subjectivity, Consciousness, and Pain: The Importance of Thinking Phenomenologically
Q48383803Subjectivity, the brain, life narratives and the ethical treatment of persons with Alzheimer's disease
Q39780806The contemporary practice of psychiatric surgery: results from a survey of North American functional neurosurgeons
Q48936227The place of moral responsibility and mental illness
Q48383763The subjective brain, identity, and neuroethics: a legal perspective
Q48936317Transferring emerging neuroscience to the clinical ethics bedside
Q48383782What are the subjective processes in our brain? Empirical and ethical implications of a relational concept of the brain

Search more.