| Literature DB >> 24860438 |
Kimberly J Schelle1, Nadira Faulmüller2, Lucius Caviola3, Miles Hewstone3.
Abstract
A primary means for the augmentation of cognitive brain functions is "pharmacological cognitive enhancement" (PCE). The term usually refers to the off-label use of medical substances to improve mental performance in healthy individuals. With the final aim to advance the normative debate taking place on that topic, several empirical studies have been conducted to assess the attitudes toward PCE in the public, i.e., in groups outside of the academic debate. In this review, we provide an overview of the 40 empirical studies published so far, reporting both their methodology and results. Overall, we find that several concerns about the use of PCE are prevalent in the public. These concerns largely match those discussed in the normative academic debate. We present our findings structured around the three most common concerns: medical safety, coercion, and fairness. Fairness is divided into three subthemes: equality of opportunity, honesty, and authenticity. Attitudes regarding some concerns are coherent across studies (e.g., coercion), whereas for others we find mixed results (e.g., authenticity). Moreover, we find differences in how specific groups-such as users, nonusers, students, parents, and health care providers-perceive PCE: a coherent finding is that nonusers display more concerns regarding medical safety and fairness than users. We discuss potential psychological explanations for these differences.Entities:
Keywords: authenticity; brain function augmentation; coercion; cognitive enhancement; fairness; medical safety; neuroenhancement; smart drugs
Year: 2014 PMID: 24860438 PMCID: PMC4029025 DOI: 10.3389/fnsys.2014.00053
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Syst Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5137
Overview of the empirical studies discussed in this review.
| Aikins, | USA | University students | Purposive sampling | Semi-structured interview | n/a | 12 | Safety, fairness |
| Asscher and Schermer, | The Netherlands | General public | Purposive sampling | Focus groups | n/a | 37 | Safety |
| Ball and Wolbring, | Canada | Parents | Purposive sampling | Semi-structured interview | n/a | 12 | Safety |
| Banjo et al., | USA and Canada | Physicians | Convenience sampling | Web-based survey | n/a | 212 | Safety, coercion, Fairness |
| Bell et al., | Australia | University students | Convenience sampling | Interview | n/a | 19 | Safety, coercion |
| Bergström and Lynöe, | Sweden | General public | Random sampling | Paper and pencil questionnaire | 52% | 517 | Safety |
| Physicians | 39% | 108 | |||||
| Bossaer et al., | USA | University students | All students at one university invited | Web-based survey | 59.9% | 372 | Safety, fairness |
| Desantis and Hane, | USA | University students | Convenience sampling | Interview | n/a | 175 | Safety |
| Dodge et al., | USA | University students | All students at one university invited | Web-based survey | 37% | ±1200 | Fairness |
| Dubljević et al., | Germany | University students | Three stage cluster sampling (universities, disciplines, students) | Web-based survey | First wave 53.5% | 5882 | Fairness |
| Second wave 69.1% | 3486 | ||||||
| Eickenhorst et al., | Germany | University students | Convenience sampling | Web-based survey | n/a | 1218 | Safety |
| University graduates | 106 | ||||||
| European Citizens Panel, | Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands, UK | General public | Stratified random sampling (age, profession, gender) | Citizen's deliberation | n/a | 126 | Coercion |
| Fitz et al., | USA and Canada | General public | Convenience sampling, Amazon's Mechanical Turk recruitment | Web-based survey | n/a | 4011 | Safety, coercion, fairness |
| Forlini and Racine, | Canada | University students | Purposive sampling | Focus groups | n/a | 29 | Coercion |
| Parents | 21 | ||||||
| Health care providers | 15 | ||||||
| Forlini and Racine, | Canada | University students | Purposive sampling | Focus groups | n/a | 29 | Safety, coercion, fairness |
| Parents | 21 | ||||||
| Health care providers | 15 | ||||||
| Forlini and Racine, | Canada | University students | Purposive sampling | Focus groups | n/a | 29 | Safety, fairness |
| Parents | 21 | ||||||
| Health care providers | 15 | ||||||
| Franke et al., | Germany | High school students | All students at 12 public grammar and vocational schools, and students of three departments of one university invited | Paper and pencil questionnaire | 83% | 1035 | Safety, coercion, fairness |
| University students | 512 | ||||||
| Franke et al., | Germany | University students | Convenience sampling | Interview | n/a | 22 | Safety, coercion, fairness |
| Franke et al., | Germany | Physicians | All primary care physicians in one state invited | Paper and pencil questionnaire | 30.2% | 832 | Safety |
| Hotze et al., | USA | Physicians | Random sampling | Paper and pencil questionnaire | 46.6% | 633 | Fairness |
| Judson and Langdon, | USA | University students | All students at two colleges invited | Paper and pencil questionnaire | 10% | 333 | Safety |
| Kudlow et al., | Canada | University students | All medical students at one medical school invited | Web-based survey | 50% | 326 | Safety |
| Maier et al., | Switzerland | University students | All students at three educational institutions invited | Web-based survey | 22.3% | 6275 | Coercion |
| Maslen et al., | Germany | University students | Convenience sampling | Paper and pencil questionnaire | n/a | 80 | Coercion |
| Mazanov et al., | Australian | University students | Convenience sampling | Web-based survey | n/a | 1729 | General, fairness |
| Ott and Biller-Andorno, | Switzerland | University students | Convenience sampling | Web-based survey and separate paper and pencil questionnaire | n/a | 1765 | Safety, fairness |
| Ott et al., | Switzerland | Physicians | Stratified random sampling (profession, gender, years of training, language) | Paper and pencil questionnaire | 23.9% | 379 | Safety |
| Partridge et al., | Australia | General public | Random sampling | Telephone interview | 31.9% | 1265 | General |
| Partridge et al., | Australia | University students | Convenience sampling | Interview | n/a | 19 | Safety |
| Riis et al., | USA | University students | Web-based survey | n/a | 357 | Fairness | |
| Sabini and Monterosso, | USA | University students | Convenience sampling | Paper and pencil questionnaire | n/a | 185 | Fairness |
| Santoni de Sio et al., | United Kingdom | University students | Convenience sampling | Paper and pencil questionnaire | n/a | 102 | Safety, fairness |
| Sattler et al., | Germany | University students | Three stage cluster sampling (universities, disciplines, students) | Web-based survey | 87.1% | 1852 | Safety, fairness |
| (Sattler et al., | Germany | University teachers | Three stage cluster sampling (universities, disciplines, students/teachers) | Web-based survey | 33.5% | 1402 | Safety |
| University students | 69.1% | 3486 | |||||
| Sattler et al., | Germany | University students | Three stage cluster sampling (universities, disciplines, students); only second time wave | Web-based survey | 69.1% | 3486 | Safety, coercion, fairness |
| Sattler and Wiegel, | Germany | University students | Three stage cluster sampling (universities, disciplines, students); only second time wave | Web-based survey | First wave 53.5% | 5882 | Safety |
| Second wave 69.1% | 3486 | ||||||
| Scheske and Schnall, | UK | University students | Convenience sampling, two studies - two samples | Paper and pencil questionnaire | n/a | 50 | Safety, fairness |
| 306 | |||||||
| Schildmann et al., | Germany | University students | Survey | n/a | 1026 | Coercion, fairness | |
| Schuijff and Brom, | The Netherlands | All | Purposive sampling | Focus groups | n/a | 38 | Safety, coercion, fairness |
| Sweeney, | USA | University students | Convenience sampling | Paper and pencil questionnaire | n/a | 100 | Safety, fairness |
Convenience sampling and purposive sampling require no random selection of participants, whereas random sampling, stratified random sampling and cluster sampling do. Purposive sampling requires obtaining a sample of people who meet a predetermined criterion, whereas convenience sampling does not. For stratified random sampling, a population is divided in strata (subgroups) from which participants are randomly selected to make sure all strata are represented in the sample in proportion to their prevalence in the population. Cluster sampling requires a list of clusters, e.g., disciplines in a university, from which a few clusters are randomly chosen. Instead of randomly selecting participants from a list of potential participants, e.g., all students of the university, every member of the selected cluster is invited to participate (Cozby, 2009).
The authors explicitly state that N is not equal for each analysis due to missing data or specific criteria employed.