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MEDIA REPRESENTATIONS OF NANOTECHNOLOGY DIGITAL MEDIA

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August 2001- first meeting with program officers on defining field; ... fictive formats (i.e. MMOGs) as purveyors of non-fictive information ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MEDIA REPRESENTATIONS OF NANOTECHNOLOGY DIGITAL MEDIA


1
MEDIA REPRESENTATIONS OF NANOTECHNOLOGY DIGITAL
MEDIA
  • Societal Dimensions of Nanotechnology
  • PI Meeting
  • July 28-29,2008

David M. Berube Co-ord, PCOST Public
Communication of Science and Technology North
Carolina State University USA
2
HISTORY
  • August 2001- first meeting with program officers
    on defining field
  • December 15, 2001 first exploratory grant on
    societal issue
  • NIRT 2002 first NIRT on societal issues.

3
DIGITAL MEDIA
  • CRDM 27 doctoral students.
  • Digital media -
  • computer-mediated communication
  • visual rhetoric
  • digital culture
  • electronic communication across the curriculum
  • media and technology policy
  • textual mediation
  • digital literacy and
  • online information design

http//www.chass.ncsu.edu/crdm/
4
http//communication.chass.ncsu.edu/pcost/index.ht
ml
5
PCOST
  • The PCOST Center's mission is to provide
    opportunities for scholars to understand and
    improve the public communication of emerging
    science and technology. PCOST will work with and
    support faculty and students working in wide
    arena of scholarship including communication,
    media studies, human sciences, and associated
    subject fields. Audiences for our work include
    stakeholders in science and technology such as
    policy makers, scientists, business leaders, and
    non-governmental organizations involved in
    debates about science and technology.

6
PLANS -
  • PCOST is not waiting for government funding, we
    are establishing a sponsorship system.
  • PCOST anticipates an annual web conference
    summit to discuss state of public communication
    of science.
  • PCOST has begun efforts to coordinate our work
    with Duke team (CEIN) w/o funding.

7
RESOURCES
  • 14 FACULTY from 5 universities including UNC,
    UNC-G, and Duke and over a dozen concentrations.
  • RTP presence.
  • Environmental Sciences (8 companies/1,430
    employees)
  • Information Technology (35 companies/20,849
    employees)
  • Life Sciences (48 companies/9,715 employees)
  • Materials Sciences and Engineering (21
    companies/1,187 employees) and
  • Scientific Associations, Foundations, and
    Institutes (18 companies/4,030 employees).

8
DM CHALLENGES
  • How does Digital Media give demographics, that
    are usually silent within traditional media, a
    voice? Does this present the possibility for a
    new group/type of amplifiers and attenuators?
  • Since people trust blogs more than traditional
    media, how should scientists use this to their
    advantage?
  • How has digital media strengthened the voice of
    grass roots activism/NGOs?
  • How can government communication/websites allow
    the public to become more active by also
    producing and sharing information?
  • How does digital literacy and the digital divide
    contribute to Intergenerational Conflict (IGC)?

9
DM CHALLENGES (2)
  • Can Massive Multiplayer Online Gaming (MMOG) be
    used to simulate crisis situations for emergency
    professionals? How could MMOGs be used to help
    communicate scientific risk information to the
    public? Is it possible for the public to view
    traditionally fictive formats (i.e. MMOGs) as
    purveyors of non-fictive information that should
    be respected/taken seriously?
  • How are user/contributor-managed sites like
    Wikipedia raising the bar for production
    efficiency by throwing traditional corporate
    hierarchy out the window? How can science develop
    similar sites with the same production
    efficiency? (NCouncil of Science and Environment
    standards report, issues landscape Societal
    Dimensions PI.

10
  • White Paper on Risk Communication 07/31/08
  • Workshop 08/28-29/08.
  • Citizens Guides to Nanotechnology.
  • Delphi Rounds on expert/inexpert risk rankings
    lead to Engagement activities and focus groups
    AND a closing program/workshop.

http//communication.chass.ncsu.edu/nirt/Home.html
11
Citizens GuidestoNanotechnology
  • Introduction to Nanotechnology.
  • Agri-, silva- aqua-culture.
  • Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment.
  • Cosmetics.
  • Computers.
  • Consumer products.
  • Energy.
  • Food products.
  • Risks.
  • Tissue Engineering Transplants.
  • Toxicology.
  • Water..
  • 4 pp. PDF files downloadable on applied
    nanoscience written for inexpert audiences.

http//communication.chass.ncsu.edu/citizenguideto
nano/index.html
12
CURRENT
  • D. Berube, PI NIRT Intuitive Nanotoxicology
    and Public Engagement, NSF-NIRT (Nanotechnology
    Interdisciplinary Research Team) 09/01/07
    08/30/12

PENDING
  • D. Berube, PI DRU Risky Business Risky
    decisions under uncertain conditions, NSF-DRU
    (Decision-Making, Risk and Uncertainty)
    09/01/08-08/31/11.
  • D. Berube, I IGERT Genetic Engineering and
    Society The Case of Transgenic Pests,
    NSF-IGERT, 09/01/09-08/31/11.

13
NEW RESEARCH
  • Fear appeals and their effect on public
    perceptions.
  • Belief based arguments and nanobiotechnology.
  • Fuzzy systems as an alternative to traditional
    probability in risk analysis under conditions of
    high uncertainty.
  • Especially tasty fruit as an anchoring
    principle.

http//nanohype.blogspot.com/
14
THANKSdmberube_at_ncsu.edu
  • This work was supported in part by grants from
    the National Science Foundation,
  • NSF 06-595, Nanotechnology Interdisciplinary
    Research Team (NIRT) Intuitive Toxicology and
    Public Engagement.
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