The "Inside Higher Ed" website now has an article on the Corkin
affair, summarizing some of the key points:
https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2016/08/11/new-book-criticizing-well-known-professor-neuroscience-who-died-year-sparks-ire-her

For the view from MIT, here is a link to the university's "MIT
News" website:
http://news.mit.edu/2016/faculty-defend-suzanne-corkin-0809
Not surprisingly, it is supportive of Corkin and dismissive of
Luke Dittrich whose article and book are at the center of the
controversy.  For Dittrich's response to the MIT article --
more specifically to James DiCarlo's objections -- see:
https://medium.com/@lukedittrich/questions-answers-about-patient-h-m-ae4ddd33ed9c#.lt6hpfnib

Perhaps the most troubling of the situations that Dittrich
describes is the issue of "informed consent" and how it
was obtained.  Quoting from Dittrich's response:

|The questions surrounding informed consent in Henry's
|case are among the most important questions I raise,
|in both the book and the article. From at least 1981 until 1992,
|according to information I received from Corkin herself,
|Henry was the only person signing his informed consent
|forms when he visited MIT's Clinical Research Center,
|where he would reside as a live-in test subject for as long
|as a month at a time.

Insert WTF!? here.

|Corkin ultimately recognized that Henry's profound amnesia
|might make it hard to argue that the experiments she and
|her colleagues were conducting on Henry were properly
|consented. As she wrote in a statement that she provided
|to me, "his difficulty in retaining new information raised the
|nagging question of how we obtained consent."

It is somewhat amazing that it only took 11 years for the researcher
to realize that a person who could not remember signing an
informed consent form might not be able to be able to give informed
consent.  Of course, the story doesn't stop there because the
next question is who would be the appropriate to provide
informed consent for the research that HM participated in.
And that is where the plot thickens and the interested reader
will find out for him/herself what happened and ask, perhaps,
ask why?

-Mike Palij
New York University
[email protected]

P.S.  If one believes that HM was not capable of giving informed
consent, then what should one do with the data and the publications
from the 11 year period where he was the only one giving consent?





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