My colleague Dietram Scheufele is lead author on a study in the latest issue of Nature Nanotechnology. In their survey work, Scheufele et al. find that experts are more concerned about the health and environmental risks of nanotech than the public at large. This gulf in perceptions is despite a widespread lack of knowledge about the issue among citizens. See the press release.
The findings are consistent with a study I published earlier this year with another University of Wisconsin colleague Dominique Brossard. In our survey analysis examining American perceptions of plant biotechnology, we describe as a strong value construct in American culture the tendency to automatically defer to scientific authority and expertise.
On most issues, most of the time, the preferred heuristic for the public is to trust scientists and government regulators. In other words, absent any cues that an emerging area of science might conflict with a rival value system such as religion or environmentalism, the public for the most part prefers not to know much about the risks or benefits of a technology. All that is needed is for scientists and regulators to reassure the public that a product is safe.
With nanotechnology, at this stage in its mediated issue development, no news is good news. Nanotech remains covered at the science and business pages and has yet to spill over into the wider public eye. Moreover, this limited amount of coverage remains strongly framed in terms of social progress and economic development.
However as I note with Scheufele in our article at The Scientist there are signs of a possible emerging frame shift. Yet until competing elites start to actively frame the issue in terms that trigger the application of values other than a default deference to science, expect the public to remain blissfully ignorant and supportive of nanotech.
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SICK!!!:) WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
what if the tiny robots then malfunction then should they then destroy the organs of human.
Nanotech can be an extremely complicated subject! Across many scientific disciplines.
I have raised a number of topics on my blog:http://specialtimescience.org/science_blog.html, that touch on ethics and soon as you bring ethics into the conversation it becomes a whole lot more intricate and delicate immediately.
I think as more nanotech R&D becomes public and consumers are eventually exposed to actual products things
will go more from silence to stir.
Dave Briggs
What are saying?have all this been invented or is it yet to be invented?