
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


This article synthesizes evidence linking prefrontal cortex (PFC) structure, function, and connectivity to criminal patterns. It outlines key PFC subregions, neuroimaging methods, recurring imaging signatures found in offender samples, behavioral phenotypes that emerge from prefrontal dysfunction, and the practical, clinical, and legal implications of using frontal‑lobe imaging in forensic contexts. The piece concludes with ethical cautions and research recommendations for more responsible, translational work.
By Kathlene HerbergerThis article synthesizes evidence linking prefrontal cortex (PFC) structure, function, and connectivity to criminal patterns. It outlines key PFC subregions, neuroimaging methods, recurring imaging signatures found in offender samples, behavioral phenotypes that emerge from prefrontal dysfunction, and the practical, clinical, and legal implications of using frontal‑lobe imaging in forensic contexts. The piece concludes with ethical cautions and research recommendations for more responsible, translational work.