An invaluable resource for biomedical scientists, forensic scientists, lawyers and policy makers
BLINDING AND BIAS
Chapter 1. A Primer on the Psychology of Cognitive Bias (Carla
Lindsay MacLean and Itiel Dror)
Chapter 2. Why Blinding? How Blinding? A Theory of Blinding and Its
Application to Institutional Corruption (Christopher Robertson)
BIOMEDICAL SCIENCE
Chapter 3. From Trials to Trials: Blinding, Medicine, and Honest
Adjudication (Scott H. Podolsky, David S. Jones, and Ted J.
Kaptchuk)
Chapter 4. Blinding in Biomedical Research: An Essential Method to
Reduce Risk of Bias (Asbjorn Hrobjartsson)
Chapter 5. Blind Peer Review by Academic Journals (Emily A. Largent
and Richard T. Snodgrass)
Chapter 6. Clinical Trial Blinding in the Age of Social Media (Paul
Wicks)
Chapter 7. The Ethics of Single-Blind Trials in Biomedicine
(Franklin G. Miller)
Chapter 8: “Money Blinding as a Solution to Biased Design and
Conduct of Scientific Research (Christopher Robertson and Marc A.
Rodwin)
FORENSIC SCIENCE: CRIMINAL AND CIVIL
Chapter 9. Determining the Proper Evidentiary Basis for an Expert
Opinion: What Do Experts Need to Know and When Do They Know Too
Much? (William C. Thompson)
Chapter 10. Minimizing and Leveraging Bias in Forensic Science
(Roger Koppl and Dan Krane)
Chapter 11. What Do Statisticians Really Need to Know, and When Do
They Need to Know It? (D. James Greiner)
Chapter 12. Using Blind Reviews to Address Biases in Medical
Malpractice (Jeffrey D. Robinson)
Chapter 13. Mock Juror and Jury Assessment of Blinded Expert
Witnesses (Megan S. Wright, Christopher Robertson, and David V.
Yokum)
Chapter 14. Disclosure Discretion and Selection Bias in Blinding of
Experts (Christopher Robertson)
BLINDING IN LEGAL INSTITUTIONS
Chapter 15. Why Eyes? Cautionary Tales from Law’s Blindfolded
Justice (Judith Resnik and Dennis Curtis)
Chapter 16. A Theory of Anonymity (Jeffery M. Skopek)
Chapter 17. The Cases for and Against Blindfolding the Jury (Shari
Seidman Diamond)
Chapter 18. The Compliance Equation: Creating a More Ethical and
Equitable Campaign Financing System by Blinding Contributions to
Federal Candidates (Bertram Levine and Michael Johnston)
Chapter 19. Blinding Eyewitness Identifications (Brandon
Garrett)
Chapter 20. Blind Appointments in Arbitration (Sergio Puig)
Chapter 21. Psychological Obstacles to the Judicial
Disqualification Inquiry,and Blinded Review was an Aid (David V.
Yokum)
Chapter 22. Masking Information Source Within the Internal Revenue
Service (Karie Davis-Nozemack)
Chapter 23. Blinding the Law: The Potential Virtue of Legal
Uncertainty (Yuval Feldman and Shahar Lifshitz)
Christopher Robertson is an expert at the intersection of science, health, decision sciences, and law. He serves as associate dean for research and innovation and professor at the James E. Rogers College of Law, University of Arizona, and is affiliated faculty with the Petrie Flom Center for Health Care Policy, Bioethics and Biotechnology at Harvard. Robertson also leads the University of Arizona Regulatory Science program, which identifies and resolves legal issues that impede scientific progress. Robertson has received research support from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the Safra Center for Ethics at Harvard, and the Greenwall Foundation. He graduated magna cum laude from Harvard Law School, and earned a doctorate in Philosophy at Washington University in St. Louis. He has taught at Harvard Law, NYU Law, and Washington University in St. Louis. Robertson has other forthcoming books with Johns Hopkins University Press and Harvard University Press. Aaron S. Kesselheim, M.D., J.D., M.P.H., is an Associate Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School and a faculty member in the Division of Pharmacoepidemiology and Pharmacoeconomics in the Department of Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. His research focuses on the effects of intellectual property laws and regulatory policies on pharmaceutical development, the drug approval process, and the costs, availability, and use of prescription drugs both domestically and in resource-poor settings. Dr. Kesselheim leads the Program On Regulation, Therapeutics, And Law (PORTAL), an interdisciplinary research core focusing on intersections among prescription drugs and medical devices, patient health outcomes, and regulatory practices and the law. In 2013, Dr. Kesselheim was named a Greenwall Faculty Scholar in Bioethics by the Greenwall Foundation, which supports innovative empirical research in bioethics. Dr. Kesselheim’s work is also currently funded by the Harvard Program in Therapeutic Science, the FDA, and the Laura and John Arnold Foundation. Dr. Kesselheim serves as a faculty member at the Harvard Medical School Center for Bioethics, has been a Visiting Associate Professor of Law at Yale Law School, where he teaches Food and Drug Administration Law. He is Board Certified in Internal Medicine, working as a primary care physician at the Phyllis Jen Center for Primary Care at BWH.
"Since the time of Ben Franklin, scientists have recognized the
power of blinding to help us see the world more objectively. This
collection of essays explores the complicated psychology of
blinding, while making a compelling case that we have yet to fully
embrace the power of invisibility." --Peter A. Ubel, University
Professor, Fuqua School of Business, Duke University
"Robertson and Kesselheim’s book provides an authoritative look at
the practice of blinding and how it can be used to improve our
health care and legal systems. It is a wonderful resource for
medical students, policymakers, and anyone else interested in
studying conflicts of interest and helping address bias in clinical
practice and biomedical research." --Jerry Avorn, Professor of
Medicine, Harvard Medical School
"This extraordinary collection of scholars takes on in exhaustive
detail one of the foundational questions of public policy – under
what circumstances are decisions improved by limiting
decisionmakers’ access to information. From orchestra
auditions and secret ballots to blinded trials and the parole
evidence rule, the examples discussed in in this volume’s
broad-ranging contributions illuminate when veils of ignorance
should be embraced." --Ian Ayres, Professor, Yale Law School
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