professor david m. berube. director – pcost; ncsu ges ... · (1-- 7) rank nanomaterials mean sd 1...

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Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES Research Scholar. NSA LAS Funded Investigator; US FDA RCAC. Manager, Center Emerging Technologies, LLC. SoT Webinar, November 18, 2014 SoT Webinar, November 18, 2014

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Page 1: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

Professor David M. Berube.Director – PCOST; NCSU GES Research Scholar.NSA LAS Funded Investigator; US FDA RCAC.Manager, Center Emerging Technologies, LLC.

SoT Webinar, November 18, 2014SoT Webinar, November 18, 2014

Page 2: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

(1-- 7)Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD1 Silver 4.93 1.569

(1 7)

2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589

3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556

4 Zinc oxide 4.66 1.4715 Carbon nanotubes 4.48 1.639

6 Iron & Iron oxides 4.45 1.549

7 Aluminum oxide 4.38 1.498

8 Nanoclays 4.17 1.6059 Cerium oxide 4.10 1.44810 Copper & copper oxides 4 03 1 56910 Copper & copper oxides 4.03 1.569

Page 3: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4
Page 4: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

Rank Nanomaterial application Mean SD

d l & 2 031 Zinc oxide: Electronics & optics 5.21 1.0312 Silver: Medical devices & treatments 5.18 1.2783 Cerium oxide: coatings, paints & pigments 5.11 0.9564 Aluminum oxide: Electronics & optics 5.07 1.0865 Titanium dioxide: Coatings, paints & pigments 5.07 1.412

6 Zinc oxide: Medical devices & treatments 5.04 1.1057 Silicon dioxide: Automobile panels & displays 4.93 1.107

8 Nanoclays: Automobile plastics & polymers 4.89 1.286

9 Aluminum oxide: Coatings, paints & pigments 4.86 1.145

10 Silicon dioxide: Catalysts 4.81 1.388

Page 5: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

Rank Nanomaterial application Mean SD11 Iron & iron oxides: Electronics & optics 4 71 1 01311 Iron & iron oxides: Electronics & optics 4.71 1.01312 Copper & copper oxides: Electronics &

optics4.71 1.182

13 Titanium dioxide: Cosmetics 4 68 1 51713 Titanium dioxide: Cosmetics 4.68 1.51714 Carbon nanotubes: Electronics & optics 4.64 1.33915 Nanoclays: Other composites 4.57 1.26016 Carbon nanotubes: Composites 4.41 1.36617 Iron & iron oxides: Coatings, paints &

pigments4.29 1.243

18 Copper & copper oxides: Coatings, paints & pigments

4.18 1.278

19 Silver: Coatings, paints & pigments 4.07 1.35920 Silver: Cosmetics & sunscreens 3.70 1.636

Page 6: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

1. Experts may not be able to predict public concerned about nanoparticle risk profiles or may underestimate the capability of nanoparticle risk profiles or may underestimate the capability of publics to understand the risk profile of a nanoparticle or nanomaterial.

There is a phenomenon called EPoPP (expert perception of public There is a phenomenon called EPoPP (expert perception of public perception) confounding expert predictions of publicly perceived/understood risk profiles of nanoparticles and nanomaterials.

2. The regulation hypothesis may not be true. RH = experts assess k f l d ff l b h h b d drisk profiles differently because they have a better understanding

of the regulatory regimen governing a nanoparticle or nanomaterial.Th d b di ibl l i h 3. There does not seem to be any discernible algorithm experts use in determining the longitudinal risk profile of a nanoparticle or nanomaterial (today, 10 & 25 years)

Page 7: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

PUBLICS VIEWS

DATA SET 2

1. Food additives. (4.52).2. Pesticides, herbicides & fertilizers. (4.46).3 Drugs (4 22)3. Drugs. (4.22).4. Community waste water treatment. (4.16).5. Food packaging. (4.16).p g g ( )6. Cleaning products. (4.10).7. Explosives. (4.05).

T d b b d t (4 04)8. Toys and baby products. (4.04)9. Water filters. (3.90).10. Paints and inks. (3.75).( )

Page 8: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

DATA SET 3

PUBLIC VIEW BY EXPERTSPUBLIC VIEW BY EXPERTS1. Cosmetics. (3.06).2. Food additives. (3.67).2. Food additives. (3.67).3. Sunscreens. (4.22).4. Anything to do with carbon nanotubes. (4.65).

b ( )5. Nanobots. (6.0852).6. Anti-microbial toys and baby products. (6.56).7 Anti-microbial clothing (7 00)7. Anti microbial clothing. (7.00).8. Food packaging. (7.06).9. Pesticides and herbicides. (8.23).10. Medicine. (8.50).

Page 9: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

1. STAKEHOLDERS ARE NOT EQUAL.

1. Public is generally disinterested (70%). g y ( )Public is overwhelmingly disinterested in science and technology policy (90%).

2 P h bli f i 2. Prepare the public for a trigger event (contagion). Inoculate the public. Anchor a positive. positive.

3. Engagement is not for everyone. Self-selection. Embrace the fact you will never succeed totally.

Page 10: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

PERCEIVED RISKS OF NANO:AWARE VS UNAWARE RESPONDENTSAWARE VS. UNAWARE RESPONDENTS

HOW IMPORTANT IS AWARENESS?

Hart, CNS - NTFs

Page 11: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

PERCEIVED BENEFITS OF NANO:AWARE VS UNAWARE RESPONDENTSAWARE VS. UNAWARE RESPONDENTS

HOW IMPORTANT IS AWARENESS?

Page 12: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

2. ENGAGE THE RIGHT AUDIENCES.

1. Audiences process frames through their own 1. Audiences process frames through their own perceptual filters, i.e., audiences use religious beliefs, moral schema, etc.

2. Perceptions are just that – the role of opinion – attitude – perception – behavior.

3. Determine your audience (the 7-10 percent solution) and why: duty, funding (EPOPP),

i b d iprotestation, boycotts, and consumerism.

Page 13: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

NISE AUDIENCES

Page 14: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

SCIENCE TELEVISION

EliteEliteAudiences

com

es

MassAudiencesPo

sitive

Outc

Low HighMessage Exposure

Page 15: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

3. THE PUBLIC IS NOT WHO YOU THINK THEY ARE.

1. Defining the public, publics…. 2. A day in the life of the public. Empathize

with the day-to-day concerns of the public. Th bli i d b t th The public is concerned about the economy, their jobs, and their families. The public is very concerned about their deaths very concerned about their deaths.

3. Understand the “Big Sort” & digital communication.communication.

Page 16: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4
Page 17: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4
Page 18: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

The American landscape is undergoing a “big sort” with the general public forming sort with the general public forming communities of interest and opinions in regionally discrete areas. This effect is likely g y yto be amplified as opinion nuclei become more extreme and attract more like-minded

( h l d )citizens (Bishop, 2008; Florida, 2008).

Page 19: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

TV and Internet News Consumption

80

70

50

60

ach

med

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40

mp

tion

fro

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a

TV 1998TV 2008WWW 1998WWW 2008

20

30

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018-24 25-29 30-34 35-49 50-64 65+

Age Range

Page 20: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

4. THE MORALITY ISSUE

70“Which of the following best describes your views about nanotechnology?”

“strongly” or “somewhat” agreeScheufele et al, 2009The image cannot be displayed. Your computer may not have enough memory to open the image, or the image may have been corrupted. Restart your computer, and then open the file again. If the red x still appears, you may have to delete the image and then insert it again.

50

60 strongly or somewhat agreethat nano is morally acceptable“ t l ” “ h t”

The image cannot be displayed. Your computer may not have enough memory to open the image, or the image may have been corrupted. Restart your computer, and then open the file again. If the red x still appears, you may have to delete the image and then insert it again.

30

40 “strongly” or “somewhat”disagree that nano is morally acceptable

10

20

The image cannot be displayed. Your computer may not have enough memory to open the image, or the image may have been corrupted. Restart your computer, and then open the file again. If the red x still appears, you may have to delete the image and then insert it again.

0“I approve of nanotechnologyas long as the usual levels ofgo ernment reg lation are in

“I approve of nanotechnology If it is more tightly regulated ”

“I do not approve ofnanotechnology except under very

“I do not approve ofnanotechnology under an circ mstances ”government regulation are in

place.”regulated. except under very

special circumstances.” any circumstances.”

Page 21: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

Communication Risk to the Public5. FRAMES AND COUNTER-FRAMES

1. Frames are not informational; they are 1. Frames are not informational; they are evaluative. Franken-food. Bailout. Global warming.

2. Frames help people make sense of complicated information, esp. scientific and t h l i l technological ones.

3. Reframing. St t d l ti Next 3 slides - Dietram Scheufele Structured analytics. Movement theory.

Next 3 slides Dietram Scheufele

Page 22: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

FRANKENFOOD

Page 23: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

COMMUNICATING RISK (MEDICINE)

NB: Rehabilitation.

Page 24: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

COMMUNICATING RISK TO THE PUBLIC

NB: Risk (alert) fatigue researchNB: Risk (alert) fatigue research

Page 25: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

Public unconcerned about nanoparticles compared to other risksother risks.Ranked 19/24.

JNR’11JNR’11

Page 26: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4
Page 27: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

STS IMPACT MAPPING

Map the societal variables against a test case.Map the societal variables against a test case. Justice: risk parity. Employment levels.p y Area/national gross product. Economic competitiveness. Wealth accumulation (rich-poor gap). Humanitarian needs.

S i lt l di ti Sociocultural disruptions. Quality of life.

Page 28: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

AB

Page 29: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

Theory of Planned BehaviorB ~ I ∑ A (w ) + SN(w ) + PBC(w )B ~ I ∑ AB(w1) + SN(w2) + PBC(w3)

Ajzen proposed to explain (B) behavior and (I) intention as a function of (AB) attitudes and beliefs toward the behavior, (SN) subjective norms pertaining to the behavior and (PBC) perceived subjective norms pertaining to the behavior, and (PBC) perceived behavioral control.

• AB is one’s attitude toward the behavior and that attitudes is the sum of belief strength (bi) and belief evaluation (ei). g ( i) ( i)

• SN is the NBi salience of norm to others; MCi as one's motivation to comply;

• PBC is ci as the likelihood of a given control factor occurring; and pi as the power of the control factor to inhibit or facilitate behavior.

• These variables are weighted. S Fi hb i & Aj• See Fishbein & Ajzan.

Page 30: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

• Can axiologies be quantized systems? Yes, but….systems? Yes, but….

• Should axiologies be quantized systems? Maybe

Relying on

q y ynot, but….

• Building algorithms to i i• Relying on

experts… ??? Experts needs

examine competing hypotheses open points of entry.• Experts needs

to dialogue on societal

entry.

on societal issues with the public.the public.

Page 31: Professor David M. Berube. Director – PCOST; NCSU GES ... · (1-- 7) Rank Nanomaterials Mean SD 1 Silver 4.93 1.569 2 Titanium dioxide 4.90 1.589 3 Silicon dioxide 4.72 1.556 4

COM GES LAS & CRDMCOM, GES, LAS & CRDM [email protected]

Hunt Library, Centennial Campus, NCSU