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The surprising connection between brain injuries and crime

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    A traumatic brain injury, or TBI,
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    is a disruption in brain function
    caused by an external blow to the head.
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    And when you hear that definition,
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    you might think about sports
    and professional athletes,
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    since it's the kind of injury
    we're used to seeing on the playing field.
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    And this imagery has really come
    to define TBI in the public consciousness.
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    I myself do research on TBI
    in retired and college athletes.
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    I stood on a TED stage in 2010,
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    talking about concussions in kids' sports.
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    So I have to say, as someone
    who researches and treats these injuries,
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    that I've been really gratified
    to see the growing awareness of TBI
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    and specifically, the short-
    and long-term risks to athletes.
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    Today, though, I want to introduce you
    to a larger but no less controversial
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    group of people impacted
    by traumatic brain injury,
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    who don't often show up in the headlines.
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    I've come to recognize
    these inmates and probationers
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    as surprisingly among the most
    vulnerable members of society.
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    For the last six years, my colleagues
    and I have been doing research
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    that has completely changed the way
    we think about the criminal justice system
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    and the people in it.
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    And it may change the way
    you think about those things, too.
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    So I'll start with a shocking statistic:
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    50 to 80 percent of people
    in criminal justice
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    have a traumatic brain injury.
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    Up to 80 percent.
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    In the general public,
    in this room, for example,
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    that number is less than five percent.
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    And I'm not just talking about
    getting your bell rung.
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    These are the kinds of injuries
    that require hospitalization.
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    Most of them are the product
    of a physical assault,
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    and some of them
    are actually sustained in jail.
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    All of these numbers are even higher
    among the women in criminal justice.
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    Almost every single woman
    in the criminal justice system
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    has been exposed to interpersonal
    violence and abuse.
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    More than half of these women have
    been exposed to repeated brain injuries.
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    In this way, these women's brains look
    like the brains of retired NFL players,
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    and they'll likely face the same risks
    for dementing diseases as they age.
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    The same risks.
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    TBI, together with mental illness
    and substance abuse and trauma,
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    makes it hard for people to think.
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    They have cognitive impairments like
    poor judgment and poor impulse control,
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    problems that make
    criminal justice a revolving door.
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    People get arrested and booked into jail.
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    They oftentimes get into trouble
    while they're in there.
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    They get into fights.
    They fall out of their bunk.
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    And then they get released
    and do stupid things,
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    like forgetting mandatory check-ins,
    and they get rearrested.
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    Statistically speaking,
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    they're actually more likely
    to be rearrested than not.
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    A colleague calls this "serving
    a life sentence 30 days at a time."
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    And oftentimes, these folks don't know
    why this is so hard for them.
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    They feel out of control and frustrated.
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    So knowing that TBI is at the root
    of so many of these challenges,
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    the mission for a group of us in Colorado
    has been to disrupt that cycle,
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    to jam the revolving the door.
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    So working together
    with my state and local partners,
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    we crafted a plan
    to meet everyone's needs:
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    the system, the inmates and probationers,
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    my graduate students.
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    In this program, we assess
    how each person's brain works
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    so that we can recommend
    basic modifications
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    to make this system more effective
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    and safer.
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    And here when I say "safer,"
    I mean safer not only for the inmates,
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    but safer also for correctional staff.
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    In some ways, this is
    such a simple approach.
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    We're not treating the brain injury,
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    we're treating the underlying problem
    that gets people into all of this trouble
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    in the first place.
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    We do quick neuropsychological
    screening tests
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    to identify strengths and weaknesses
    in the way an inmate thinks.
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    Using that information,
    we write two reports.
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    One, a report for the system
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    with specific recommendations
    on how to manage that inmate.
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    The other is a letter to the inmate
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    with specific suggestions
    for how to manage themselves.
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    For example, if our test result suggests
    that a probationer has a hard time
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    remembering the things they hear,
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    that would be an auditory memory deficit.
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    In that case, our letter
    to the court might suggest
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    that that probationer get handouts
    of important information.
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    And our letter to that probationer
    would say, among other things,
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    that they should carry a notebook
    to record that information for themselves.
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    Now, most importantly,
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    is that I pause here
    to be really clear about one point.
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    This program does not
    minimize responsibility
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    or make excuses for anyone's behavior.
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    This is about changing longstanding
    negative perceptions
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    and building self-advocacy.
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    It's actually about taking responsibility.
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    The inmates move from,
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    "I'm a total screwup, I'm a loser,"
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    to, "Here's what I don't do well,
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    and here's what I have to do about it."
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    (Applause)
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    And the system comes to see
    an inmate's problematic behavior
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    as the things they can't do
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    versus the things they won't do.
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    And that change --
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    seeing behavior as a deficit
    rather than outright defiance --
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    is everything in these settings.
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    We hear from inmates around the country,
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    and they write, and more than anything,
    they want to know how to help themselves.
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    This is an excerpt from a letter
    from Troy in Virginia,
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    an excerpt from a 50-page letter.
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    And he writes,
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    "Can you tell me what you think
    of all the head traumas I've dealt with?
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    What can I do? Can you help me?"
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    Closer to home, we have
    thousands of stories like this,
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    and smart stories, stories
    that have a great outcome.
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    Here's Vinny.
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    Vinny was hit by a car when he was 15,
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    and from that moment forward,
    spent more time in jail than in school.
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    With some basic skill-building,
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    after our assessment revealed
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    that he had some pretty
    significant memory impairments,
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    Vinny learned to use the alarm
    and reminder function on his iPhone
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    to track important appointments,
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    and he keeps a checklist
    to break larger tasks
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    into smaller, manageable ones.
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    And with basic tools
    like that under his belt,
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    Vinny's been out of jail for two years,
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    clean for nine months,
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    and recently back to work.
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    (Applause)
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    What's so striking for Vinny
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    is that this is his first time
    off of court supervision
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    since his injury more than 15 years ago.
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    He made it out of the revolving door.
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    (Applause)
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    He says now, "I can do anything.
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    I just have to work
    a lot harder at it." (Laughs)
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    And here's Thomas.
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    Thomas has some pretty significant
    attention and behavior problems
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    after an injury landed him in a coma
    for more than a month.
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    After relearning how to walk,
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    his first stop?
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    Court.
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    He couldn't imagine a future
    where he wasn't in trouble.
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    He now carries a calendar
    to avoid being held in contempt
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    for missed court dates,
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    and he schedules a break
    into his day every day
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    to recharge before he gets agitated.
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    And nobody knows the revolving door
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    better than the person sitting
    at the front of the courtroom.
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    This is my good friend and colleague
    Judge Brian Bowen.
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    Now, Judge Bowen was already on a mission
    to make the system work for everyone,
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    and when he heard about this program,
    he saw the perfect fit.
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    He actually sits down
    with all of his prosecutors
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    to help them see that there's basically
    two categories of defendants
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    in the courtroom:
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    the ones we're afraid of --
    oftentimes, rightfully so --
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    and the ones we're mad at.
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    These are the ones who miss
    all of their scheduled appointments
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    and they blow through
    the best-laid probation plans.
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    And Judge Bowen believes that,
    with a little more support,
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    we could move people
    in this latter category,
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    the maddening category,
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    through and ultimately out of the system.
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    He proved that with Navy veteran Mike.
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    Judge Bowen saw the correlation between
    Mike's history of a massive 70-foot fall
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    and his long-standing pattern
    of difficulty showing up on the right day
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    for court appointments
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    and complying with mandatory
    therapy requirements, for example.
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    And instead of sentencing him
    to more and more jail time,
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    Judge Bowen sent him home
    with maps and checklists and handouts
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    and recommended instead
    vocational rehabilitation
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    and flexible scheduling
    for those therapies.
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    And this with those supports,
    Mike's back to work
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    for the first time since his injury
    while he was in the service.
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    He's repairing relationships
    with his family,
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    and just last month,
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    he graduated from
    Judge Bowen's veteran's court.
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    (Applause)
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    This program shows us
    the overwhelming prevalence
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    of traumatic brain injuries
    and cognitive deficits
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    and the accumulation of brokenness
    in the criminal justice system.
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    And it highlights the extraordinary power
    of resilience and responsibility.
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    In Mike and Thomas and Vinny,
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    even Judge Bowen's story,
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    you saw the transformation made possible
    by a change in perception
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    and some simple accommodations.
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    All told, in this program,
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    these inmates and probationers
    come to see themselves differently.
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    The system sees them differently,
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    and when you meet them in the community,
    I hope you see them differently, too.
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    Thanks, guys.
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    (Applause)
Title:
The surprising connection between brain injuries and crime
Speaker:
Kim Gorgens
Description:

Here's a shocking statistic: 50 to 80 percent of people in the criminal justice system in the US have had a traumatic brain injury. In the general public, that number is less than five percent. Neuropsychologist Kim Gorgens shares her research into the connection between brain trauma and the behaviors that keep people in the revolving door of criminal justice -- and some ways to make the system more effective and safer for everyone.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
11:42

English subtitles

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