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Neuroscience, Mind Reading and Mental Privacy
Res Publica, 2016Many theorists have expressed the view that current or future applications of neurotechnology may prompt serious ethical problems in terms of privacy. This article concerns the question as to whether involuntary neurotechnological mind reading can plausibly be held to violate a person’s moral right to mental privacy.
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Mental privacy in the age of neurotechnology
2022Second semester University: Uppsala ...
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Privacy versus care—The shifting balance in mental health.
Families, Systems, & Health, 2016Mental health professionals are now debating client confidentiality and its relationship to care coordination. History tells us there is a need to protect the privacy of people who are diagnosed with mental health issues in a world filled with stigma and misperceptions. People with mental illness and substance use problems may be legitimately concerned
Mary Jean Mork +2 more
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Privacy homomorphisms for e-gambling and mental poker
2006 IEEE International Conference on Granular Computing, 2006Abstract —With the development of computer networks, situ-ations where a set of players remotely play a game ( e-gaming )have become usual. Often players play for money ( e-gambling ),which requires standards of security similar to those in physicalgambling.
J. Castella-Roca +3 more
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Can Brain Imaging Breach Our Mental Privacy?
Review of Philosophy and Psychology, 2014Brain-imaging technologies have posed the problem of breaching our brain privacy. Until the invention of those technologies, many of us entertained the idea that nothing can threaten our mental privacy, as long as we kept it, for each of us has private access to his or her own mind but no access to any other. Yet, philosophically, the issue of private,
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Privacy Preserving Data Analysis in Mental Health Research
2015 IEEE International Congress on Big Data, 2015The digitalization of mental health records and psychotherapy notes has made individual mental health data more readily accessible to a wide range of users including patients, psychiatrists, researchers, statisticians, and data scientists. However, increased accessibility of highly sensitive mental records threatens the privacy and confidentiality of ...
Jingquan Li, Xueying Li
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Mental Privacy, Cognitive Liberty, and Hog-tying
Journal of Bioethical InquiryAs the science and technology of the brain and mind develop, so do the ways in which brains and minds may be surveilled and manipulated. Some cognitive libertarians worry that these developments undermine cognitive liberty or "freedom of thought." I argue that protecting an individual's cognitive liberty undermines others' ability to use their own ...
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Book: Privacy and Confidentiality in Mental Health Care
BMJ, 2001Eds John J Gates, Bernard S Arons P H Brookes, £27.50, pp 272 ISBN 1 55766 426 9 Rating: ![Graphic][1] ![Graphic][2] ![Graphic][3] Gates and Arons discuss issues of confidentiality and privacy in the United States in relation to mental health services for adults and children, law and ethics, technology, substance misuse, and the patient's family.
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Mental Models for Usable Privacy: A Position Paper
2014In this position paper, we propose a new approach to privacy decision-making that relies on conceptual representations of mental models. We suggest that helping users to construct mental models of privacy will facilitate privacy decisions and hence contribute towards usable privacy.
Kovila P. L. Coopamootoo, Thomas Groß
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PRIVACY, MEANING AND MENTAL TERMS
2006This article describes the possible ways in virtue of which the mental terms get their meanings. Especially, it is discussed that the sentation-dependent experiences play a central role in assigning meanings to the mental terms. It is also suggested that ‘quale’ of sensation-dependent experiences gives an experience a distinctive character in terms of ...
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