| Literature DB >> 26208573 |
Irja Marije de Jong1, Frank Kupper2, Marlous Arentshorst2, Jacqueline Broerse2.
Abstract
Besides offering opportunities in both clinical and non-clinical domains, the application of novel neuroimaging technologies raises pressing dilemmas. 'Responsible Research and Innovation' (RRI) aims to stimulate research and innovation activities that take ethical and social considerations into account from the outset. We previously identified that Dutch neuroscientists interpret "responsible innovation" as educating the public on neuroimaging technologies via the popular press. Their aim is to mitigate (neuro)hype, an aim shared with the wider emerging RRI community. Here, we present results of a media-analysis undertaken to establish whether the body of articles in the Dutch popular press presents balanced conversations on neuroimaging research to the public. We found that reporting was mostly positive and framed in terms of (healthcare) progress. There was rarely a balance between technology opportunities and limitations, and even fewer articles addressed societal or ethical aspects of neuroimaging research. Furthermore, neuroimaging metaphors seem to favour oversimplification. Current reporting is therefore more likely to enable hype than to mitigate it. How can neuroscientists, given their self-ascribed social responsibility, address this conundrum? We make a case for a collective and shared responsibility among neuroscientists, journalists and other stakeholders, including funders, committed to responsible reporting on neuroimaging research.Entities:
Keywords: Media-analysis; Neurohype; Neuroimaging; Responsible research and innovation; Technology assessment
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26208573 PMCID: PMC4996888 DOI: 10.1007/s11948-015-9684-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Eng Ethics ISSN: 1353-3452 Impact factor: 3.525
Fig. 1Opportunities, limitations and wider aspects of science and technology
Coding guide
| The final coding guide contained the following coding categories: |
| a) The newspaper and section in which the article was published |
| b) Date of publication, and word count |
| c) Reason for publication (news items or opinion item) |
| d) Neuroimaging research domain (healthcare, non-healthcare, boundary) |
| e) Insights (healthcare or non-healthcare, see Table |
| f) Achieved or projected progress (healthcare, technological, scientific, other) |
| g) Limitations and wider aspects of science and technology |
| h) Nuance style (no nuance, disclaimer, correction, nuance, contestation, sensationalism) |
| i) Brain/scanning metaphor (see Table |
Coding categories for metaphors, ordered by occurrence in individual articles
| Scanning technology as | The brain as |
|---|---|
|
| Object matter |
| Cartography | Sentient being |
| Evolution | Complex network |
| Revelatory | Embodied plasticity |
| Functional device | |
| Self-organizing system |
Coding categories for non-pathological brain insights, ordered by occurrence in individual articles
|
| Intelligence and learning |
| Brain development | Sleep |
| Lifestyle |
|
| Language | Free will |
| Consciousness | Meditation |
| Justice/criminality | Religion |
| Mind reading | Gender |
| General brain insights | Sensory (auditory/visual/pain) |
| Neuromarketing/finance | Humans as social beings |
| Sex, lust and love | Gaming |