Using EEG, researchers recorded the babies' brain activity in response to pain, comparing their pain responses from a touch and prick on the heels. The findings were published in the journal Current Biology.
"Babies can distinguish painful stimuli as different from general touch from around 35 to 37 weeks gestation -- just before an infant would normally be born," Lorenzo Fabrizi, lead author of the study, said in a statement.
The babies, who were 28 to 35 weeks in the womb, showed the same bursts of brain activity for the touch and the heel lance, but babies at more than 35 weeks' gestation had a greater burst of activity in response to the lance than the simple touch.
The director of the division of newborn medicine at Washington University School of Medicine at St. Louis noted the study "suggests that brain maturation required for fetal pain perception occurs in late pregnancy, more than 11 weeks after the legal limit for abortion in the United States."
This research isn't definitive, of course, but the burden of proof to demonstrate that significant life begins at conception ought to be placed upon the anti-abortion rights community. It will not be, of course, and there is little or no chance of re-examination by the 'fetal pain six'- and "little" is on its way out of town.
1 comment:
Well, as good as pain is an indicator of humanity imho, it ain't the whole enchilada. Maybe the burden of proof should be on the pro-abortion rights folks to show that the fetus in a woman's womb has a chance of developing into something non-human. A Pterodactyl maybe?
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