ギリス フルタカ アマンダジヨアン   GILLIS FURUTAKA AMANDA J
  ギリス フルタカ アマンダ ジョアン
   所属   京都産業大学  外国語学部 英語学科
   職種   教授
言語種別 英語
発行・発表の年月 2021/03
形態種別 研究論文
査読 査読あり
標題 Be(a)ware of What You See in an fMRI Image: Why does fMRI come with a warning label?
執筆形態 単著
掲載誌名 Bulletin of the JALT Mind, Brain, and Education SIG Research: A Consumer Guide for Reading Research ISSN 2434-1002
掲載区分国内
出版社・発行元 JALT Mind Brain and Education Special Interest Group
巻・号・頁 7(3),pp.36-40
総ページ数 5
著者・共著者 Amanda Gillis-Furutaka
原著者 Amanda Gillis-Furutaka
概要 Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) generated great excitement when it was introduced in the 1990s, because it allowed brain researchers to see what was happening, and where, inside a living person’s head. Before the twentieth century, researchers could only deduce the functions of brain regions after they had been damaged, and could only look directly at the brains of people who had died. However, fMRI images have also been labelled as “brain porn” (Helding, 2020, p. 48) when they are overused to add credibility to what writers and public speakers wish to say. I count myself among the gullible guilty who have scoured the internet for an image that will illustrate my point, with too little investigation into the original source. This article explains how to make sure you understand what each fMRI image shows.