Young Man Describes Living With Autism
Fourteen-year-old Toto
Mukhopadhyay, born and raised in India, has difficulty speaking in
English,
though he has a huge vocabulary. But he writes easily and eloquently
about what
it is like to be locked up inside an autistic mind.Researchers are
taking advantage of this rare opportunity to learn about autism.
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New Medication for ADHD
It is estimated that as many as one-third of grade school children are
being treated for attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder. Up until
now, there has been only one type of medication available. The Food and
Drug Administration approved a new drug that acts on one of the brain's
neurotransmitters.
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Why Do People Confess to Crimes They Did Not Commit? And What Can Be Done to Stop It? In December 2002, a
New York
judge granted an unusual request of the chief Manhattan prosecutor: He
dismissed all charges against five men who had initially confessed to
the crimes they were charged with.
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The Making of a Criminal: John Allen Muhammad
On October 24, 2002, a three-week siege of sniper attacks in the
Washington, D.C., suburbs ended with the capture of 40-year-old
John Allen Muhammad and 17-year-old
Lee Malvo. What the factors led to their violent rampage? In Part I of this two-part series, we examined the life of
Lee Malvo. In Part II, we look at the life of
John Allen Muhammad.
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The Making of a Criminal: Lee Malvo
On October 24, 2002, a three-week siege of sniper attacks in the
Washington, D.C., suburbs ended with the capture of 40-year-old
John Allen Muhammad and 17-year-old
Lee Malvo. What factors led to their violent rampage? In Part I of this two-part series, we examine the life of
Lee Malvo.
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A Challenge to Research on Eyewitness Testimony One
of the greatest contributions psychologists have made to the legal
field has been research into the problems with eyewitness testimony.
But a
New York
court believes that the research is flawed and refused to let a famous
psychologist testify for a criminal defendant about the vagaries of
such testimony.
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The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (
DSM), first published in 1952, categorizes disorders and provides specific criteria for diagnosis. The
DSM-IV,
published in 1994, is currently being revised. A controversy is brewing
over efforts to create a new category--relational disorders.
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Single-Sex Schools: Back to the Future?After
30 years of federal policy that discouraged it, in May 2002 the Bush
administration announced that it would encourage single-sex education
in public schools. Most research touting the benefits of same-sex
education talks about its value to girls. Does anyone care about the
boys?
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New Research Shows Prenatal Exposure to Cocaine Affects Cognitive DevelopmentAbout
one million children have been born after fetal cocaine exposure since
the mid 1980s. Early research indicated that such exposure could cause
serious and permanent damage to the child's attentional, information
processing, and learning abilities. A longitudinal study finds proof of
long-term cognitive effects.
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Explaining the Andrea Yates Verdict"If
this woman doesn't meet the test of insanity in this state, then nobody
does," said Andrea Yates's defense attorney George Parnham to the jury
as they prepared to deliberate his client's guilt or insanity. It took
the jury only three and one-half hours to decide that his client did
not meet that stringent Texas standard, and only one hour to spare her
life in the sentencing phase. What accounted for the swiftness and
certainly of their verdict and sentence?
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Kansas Court Rules that Transgendered Woman is a ManWhen
Joe Gardner's 85-year-old father died in 1999 without a will, meaning
that he and his father's 40-year-old wife would equally divide his
father's $2.5 million estate, Joe set out to find a way to get it all
for himself. He did not know how easy it would be until he found out
that his father had married a man.
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Children Conceived Through ART Face Multiple RisksFor
men and women whose opportunities to become parents are limited by
health or genetic problems, assisted reproductive technologies (ART)
offer an alternative to childlessness or adoption. But recent studies
indicate that children conceived through these methods face multiple
risks.
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British Professors Stir
Criticism With Prisonlike Experiment for Reality-TV
ShowTwo British psychology professors who ventured
into reality television with an experiment that simulated
prison have stirred controversy in Britain.
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