
You Can't Trust A Tortured Brain: Neuroscience
Discredits Coercive Interrogation
ScienceDaily (Sep. 22, 2009) —
According to a new review of neuroscientific research, coercive interrogation
techniques used during the Bush administration to extract information from
terrorist suspects are likely to have been unsuccessful and may have had many
unintended negative effects on the suspect's memory and brain functions.
A new article, published in the journal, Trends in Cognitive Science,
reviews scientific evidence demonstrating that repeated and extreme stress and
anxiety have a detrimental influence on brain functions related to memory.
Memos released by the US Department of Justice in April of 2009 detailing
coercive interrogation techniques suggest that prolonged periods of shock,
stress, anxiety, disorientation and lack of control are more effective than
standard interrogatory techniques in making subjects reveal truthful information
from memory. "This is based on the assumption that subjects will be
motivated to reveal veridical information to end interrogation, and that extreme
stress, shock and anxiety do not impact memory," says review author,
Professor Shane O'Mara from the Institute of Neuroscience at Trinity College in
Dublin, Ireland. "However, this model of the impact of extreme stress on
memory and the brain is utterly unsupported by scientific evidence."
Psychological studies suggest that during extreme stress and anxiety, the
captive will be conditioned to associate speaking with periods of safety. For
the captor, when the captive speaks, the objective of gaining information will
have been obtained and there will be relief from the unsavory task of
administering these conditions of stress. Therefore, it is difficult or
impossible to determine during the interrogation whether the captive is
revealing truthful information or just talking to escape the torture. Research
has also shown that extreme stress has a deleterious effect on the frontal lobe
and is associated with the production of false memories.
Neurochemical studies have revealed that the hippocampus and prefrontal
cortex, brain regions integral to the process of memory, are rich in receptors
for hormones that are activated by stress and sleep deprivation and which have
been shown to have deleterious effects on memory. "To briefly summarize a
vast, complex literature, prolonged and extreme stress inhibits the biological
processes believed to support memory in the brain," says O'Mara. "For
example, studies of extreme stress with Special Forces Soldiers have found that
recall of previously-learned information was impaired after stress
occurred." Waterboarding in particular is an extreme stressor and has the
potential to elicit widespread stress-induced changes in the brain.
"Given our current cognitive neurobiological knowledge, it is unlikely
that coercive interrogations involving extreme stress will facilitate release of
truthful information from long term memory," concludes Professor O'Mara.
"On the contrary, these techniques cause severe, repeated and prolonged
stress, which compromises brain tissue supporting both memory and decision
making."
Journal reference:
- O'Mara et al. Torturing the Brain: On the folk psychology and folk
neurobiology motivating 'enhanced and coercive interrogation techniques.
Trends in Cognitive Science, September 21, 2009
Adapted from materials provided by Cell
Press, via EurekAlert!,
a service of AAAS.
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