TEMPE,
Ariz. –How will rapid technological change influence
democracy, affect our privacy, and even change human
identity itself? The National Science Foundation
has awarded $6.2 million to explore such questions
at the new Center for Nanotechnology in Society at
Arizona State University. Center researchers will
work side by side with scientists who are making
nanotechnology a reality to anticipate and understand
the societal consequences of this new area of innovation.
The ASU center is the largest in a network of newly
funded NSF activities on nanotechnology and society,
including a second center at University of California-Santa
Barbara and additional projects at Harvard University
and the University of South Carolina. The network
will support research and education on nanotechnology
and social change, as well as provide educational
and public outreach activities and international
collaborations.
"The Center for Nanotechnology in Society at ASU
will be devoted to interdisciplinary studies of nanotechnology
with a real social commitment," said ASU President
Michael Crow. "It will help us determine the impact
of nanotechnology on society and it will allow us
to see how society affects the course of nanotechnology
research."
Mihail Roco, NSF's senior advisor for nanotechnology,
said the new nanotechnology centers and projects
come at an important time. "The nanotechnology field
has been evolving rapidly since 2000, with technological,
economic, social, environmental and ethical implications
that could change the world," he said.
Nanotechnology is the manipulation of molecular-sized
materials to create new products and processes. It
encompasses contributions from fields such as physics,
chemistry and biochemistry, molecular biology, and
engineering, with potential applications in areas
as diverse as drug delivery and discovery, environmental
sensing, manufacturing, and quantum computing. The
potential benefits of the technology are great, but
so are the potential drawbacks from misuse or unintended
consequences.
The Center for Nanotechnology in Society at ASU
will develop a new model for understanding the interactions
of technology and society to encourage informed discussions
and improve policy choices and technological outcomes
for everyone, according to David Guston, an ASU professor
of political science and the principal investigator
at the center.
"Nanotechnology promises insights and innovations
that could revolutionize whole sectors like manufacturing,
energy and health care," Guston said. "At the same
time, it raises profound questions about privacy
and security, human identity and enhancement, environmental
and health risks, and societal and economic equity."
"We will help scientists, technologists and citizens
develop a better understanding of where scientific
and social values come from, what they mean and how
they shape the direction that nanotechnology takes," Guston
added. "As a result, informed discussions and deliberations
can enhance both the responsiveness of nanotechnology
research to societal needs, and improve the quality
of nanotechnology outcomes."
The center is a collaboration of the Consortium
for Science, Policy and Outcomes and the Biodesign
Institute at ASU. CSPO director and co-principal
investigator, Dan Sarewitz, said the center "is an
opportunity to put into practice a new model of cooperation
between the social sciences and humanities on one
hand and natural sciences and engineering on the
other."
George Poste, director of the Biodesign Institute
at ASU and co-principal investigator for the center
added that "by encouraging natural scientists and
social scientists to become more fluent in one another's
areas of knowledge, we help ensure that nanotechnology
and other emerging technologies not only fulfill
their promise to benefit humanity, but do so in ways
that reflect and respect social values."
Other ASU co-principal investigators are Marilyn
Carlson of the Center for Research on Education in
Science, Mathematics, Engineering and Technology,
and Anne Schneider of the School of Justice and Social
Inquiry.
The center also will feature important collaborations
between ASU and the University of Wisconsin, Madison;
Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta; North Carolina
State University, Raleigh; University of Colorado,
Boulder; Rutgers University, New Brunswick, N.J.;
and other universities, private and public sector
groups and individual researchers.
The center will develop a research program called "real
time technology assessment" (RTTA), which will map
the research dynamics of nanotechnology, monitor
the changing values of the public and researchers,
engage groups in discussions concerning nanotechnology
and its possible future, and assess the influence
of these activities on the researchers. "Only by
pursuing the sort of program offered by RTTA can
society promote the learning necessary to move beyond
our historical tendency to react to technologies
after they permeate society," Guston said. "As technologies
become more powerful, we need to be able to make
better decisions, at an earlier stage, about the
directions that they are taking."
Source:
David Guston, (480) 727-8829
Contact: Skip Derra
skip.derra@asu.edu
480-965-4823
Arizona State University
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