大学职业资格刷题搜题APP
下载APP
课程
题库模板
WORD模板下载
EXCEL模板下载
题库创建教程
创建题库
登录
logo - 刷刷题
创建自己的小题库
搜索
【简答题】

In September last year Donna Saunders, a 33-year-old woman from West Sus, held a pillow over her sleeping mother's face for 30 seconds before stopping as her mother struggled and called out for help. In June she was acquitted of attempted murder because the court accepted that she was sleepwalking and was thus unaware of her actions. This is not an isolated case. The British courts are faced with an upsurge of “I did it in my sleep” defenses for crimes from erous driving to murder. The problem that this presents to lawyers and sleep experts is the subject of a conference at the Royal Society of Medicine. To the outsider, such cases prompt skepticism. But the sleep specialists who provide expert testimony at these cases know that many people are capable of carrying out very uncharacteristic actions while asleep as a result of sleep disorders. Between 2 percent and 4 percent of s sleepwalk, and there is plenty of evidence that strange somnambulistic ( 梦游的)actions like walking through hotels naked and urinating in cupboards are extremely common. Sleepwalking is caused by a “wiring error” in the brain. If a sleeping person is disturbed, the primitive, instinctive parts of the brain spring into life but the conscious controlling part does not. It's more likely to happen if we have a family history of sleepwalking, or are tired or stressed or have been drinking. Dr Idzikowski, director of the Edinburgh Sleep Centre, has given evidence in about 30 court cases involving sleepwalking. “I do think it is being used more often as a defense, possibly because the media has made people more aware of it," he says. The upsurge could partly be because of English law. William Wilson, professor of Criminal Law at the University of London and a speaker at the conference, says that in English law only people who have made a conscious decision to commit a crime can be punished for it. Sleepwalking, therefore, makes a good defense, particularly since it is hard to disprove. A person who has convinced a court that he or she committed a crime while sleepwalking may, under English law, be found “not guilty by reason of insanity”(even though this has nothing to do with the medical idea of insanity). Until recently, this almost inevitably resulted in being detained in a psychiatric institution.

题目标签:梦游
手机使用
分享
复制链接
新浪微博
分享QQ
微信扫一扫
微信内点击右上角“…”即可分享
反馈
收藏 - 刷刷题收藏
举报
刷刷题
参考答案:
举一反三

【多选题】幼儿梦游的主要原因有

A.
身体疲劳
B.
精神紧张
C.
喜欢梦游
D.
过度兴奋

【多选题】幼儿梦游的主要原因有()。

A.
身体疲劳
B.
精神紧张
C.
强迫行为
D.
过度兴奋

【单选题】梦游属于()。

A.
分离性障碍
B.
转换性障碍
C.
睡眠障碍
D.
运动障碍

【多选题】幼儿梦游时( )。

A.
会突然哭喊出声两眼直视
B.
心跳加速、呼吸急促、全身出汗
C.
在睡眠状态中起床行走做一些动作
D.
醒后对夜间行为大多没有回忆

【单选题】梦游属于()。

A.
分离性障碍
B.
转换性障碍
C.
睡眠障碍
D.
运动障碍

【单选题】梦游属于( )。

A.
分离性障碍
B.
转换性障碍
C.
睡眠障碍
D.
运动障碍

【单选题】梦游属于( )。

A.
分离性障碍
B.
转换性障碍
C.
睡眠障碍
D.
运动障碍

【单选题】幼儿梦游时( )。

A.
会突然哭喊出声,两眼直视
B.
心跳加速、呼吸急促、全身出汗
C.
在睡眠状态中起床行走,做一些动作
D.
醒后对夜间行为大多能旧忆
相关题目:
【多选题】幼儿梦游的主要原因有
A.
身体疲劳
B.
精神紧张
C.
喜欢梦游
D.
过度兴奋
【多选题】幼儿梦游的主要原因有()。
A.
身体疲劳
B.
精神紧张
C.
强迫行为
D.
过度兴奋
【单选题】梦游属于()。
A.
分离性障碍
B.
转换性障碍
C.
睡眠障碍
D.
运动障碍
【多选题】幼儿梦游时( )。
A.
会突然哭喊出声两眼直视
B.
心跳加速、呼吸急促、全身出汗
C.
在睡眠状态中起床行走做一些动作
D.
醒后对夜间行为大多没有回忆
【单选题】梦游属于()。
A.
分离性障碍
B.
转换性障碍
C.
睡眠障碍
D.
运动障碍
【单选题】梦游属于( )。
A.
分离性障碍
B.
转换性障碍
C.
睡眠障碍
D.
运动障碍
【单选题】梦游属于( )。
A.
分离性障碍
B.
转换性障碍
C.
睡眠障碍
D.
运动障碍
【单选题】幼儿梦游时( )。
A.
会突然哭喊出声,两眼直视
B.
心跳加速、呼吸急促、全身出汗
C.
在睡眠状态中起床行走,做一些动作
D.
醒后对夜间行为大多能旧忆
刷刷题-刷题-导入试题 - 刷刷题
参考解析:
题目纠错 0
发布
刷刷题-刷题-导入试题 - 刷刷题刷刷题-刷题-导入试题 - 刷刷题刷刷题-刷题-导入试题 - 刷刷题
刷刷题-刷题-导入试题 - 刷刷题
刷刷题-刷题-导入试题 - 刷刷题
刷刷题-单词鸭