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Long-term offenders have different brain structure, study says

 

Фотографии: akipress.kg

November 30, -0001, 0:00       Источник akipress.kg       Комментарии

AKIPRESS.COM - Parents should not worry about their teenagers' delinquent behaviour provided they were well behaved in their earlier childhood, according to researchers behind a study that suggests those who offend throughout their life showed antisocial behaviour from a young age and have a markedly different brain structure as adults, The Guardian reports.
According to figures from the Ministry of Justice, 24% of males in England and Wales aged 10-52 in 2006 had a conviction, compared with 6% of females. Previous work has shown that crime rises in adolescence and young adulthood but that most perpetrators go on to become law-abiding adults, with only a minority - under 10% of the general population - continuing to offend throughout their life.
Such trends underpin many modern criminal justice strategies, including in the UK where police can use their discretion as to whether to a young offender should enter the formal justice system.
Now researchers say they have found that adults with a long history of offences show striking differences in brain structure compared with those who have stuck to the straight and narrow or who transgressed only as adolescents.

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АГРОПОРТАЛ КЫРГЫЗСТАНА, НОВОСТИ СЕЛЬСКОГО ХОЗЯЙСТВА
Обучение ювелирному делу в Бишкеке
МСН Общественно-политическая газета

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