Categories
Responsible Innovation

Assessing Nanoparticle Risks to Human Health

Back in 2011 — before that actually — I was asked to write the introduction to an edited book on assessing nanoparticle health risks to human health.

In 2016 a second edition of the book was published, with with a spruced up introductory chapter.

This is one of the few places that I’ve written broadly about the nature of nanoparticle health risks and provided a historic context that tends to be overlooked. Sadly–and as all too often happens with edited books–that chapter is virtually inaccessible to most readers, being lodged in a book that costs well over $100.

So I thought I’d replicate it here–for free.

This is based on the final draft of the chapter and so doesn’t match it precisely. But hopefully it’s still of use. And if you’re interested in the original, as of writing this, you can download it here–although this may not last!


1 INTRODUCTION

In 1990, two consecutive papers appeared in the Journal of Aerosol Science asking whether inhaled particles smaller than 100 nm in diameter are more harmful than an equivalent mass of larger particles (Ferin, Oberdörster et al. 1990, Oberdörster, Ferin et al. 1990). On a mass for mass basis, nanometer-scale particles of TiO2 and Al2O3 were shown to elicit a significantly greater inflammatory response in the lungs of rats compared to larger particles with the same chemical composition. At the time, this research was little more than a curiosity – a novel response to relatively benign materials. But with the advent of the field of nanotechnology, the importance of understanding how the physical form and chemical composition of increasingly sophisticated nanoscale materials influence human health risks has escalated. Now, the ability to identify, assess and address potential impacts from intentionally engineered nanomaterials is seen by many as critical to the success of an increasing range of nanotechnology-based products.

Categories
Uncategorized

A Short Guide to the Future of Humanity

A few months ago I posted an anti-promo video for Future Rising. Going back to that video, I realize that it’s really about the future of humanity, albeit in a somewhat roundabout way!

So to reflect that, here’s the same video, different title:

Hope you enjoy it!

Categories
Health

Tackling coronavirus vaccine hesitancy

With coronavirus vaccines coming online, I thought it about time I put a vaccine video up on the Risk Bites channel on YouTube — after all, this is exactly the type of complex yet important risk and risk communication that the channel was established to address.

I’m expecting plenty of push-back on the video from the anti-vax community, but hopefully there’ll be a greater push-forward from pro-vax, pro-science and pro-public health viewers!

I took a but of a risk here (pun intended) in addressing vaccine hesitancy. But from experience, and drawing on what’s known about effective risk/health communication, this type of approach can be helpful if you’re more interested in reaching people who are seriously interested in useful information, rather than simply preaching to the choir.

This isn’t the first vaccine video to appear on Risk Bites — in the past we’ve addressed HPV vaccines, flu shots, and MMR. But it is especially relevant to the current state of things in the world.

Hopefully this gets some traction — it’s important!

Categories
Future Rising Book

Thank you for not reading Future Rising!

OK so this is not a serious thank you! It does however fit into a rather tongue in cheek promo video for Future Rising: A Journey from the Past to the Edge of Tomorrow that I’ve just published on the Risk Bites YouTube channel:

The bottom line is that if you don’t care about the future, this is not a book for you 🙂

Categories
College of Global Futures Technology Innovation

Exploring the Ethics of Neuralink’s Brain Machine Interface Tech

New blog post on the ASU College of Global Future’s Dean’s Blog:

The ethics of advanced brain machine interfaces — and why they matter

What, you might ask, have advanced brain machine interfaces got to do with global futures?

Quite a lot as it turns out!

A couple of weeks ago, I participated in a discussion on the the governance and ethics of brain machine interface technologies in a meeting of the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine Committee on Science, Technology and the Law (my comments are at the end of this article). This was a scoping discussion to get a sense of the potential issues here that may need to be addressed moving forward, and was prompted in part by the developments coming out of Elon Musk’s company Neuralink.

Much as Musk has had an outsized impact on electric vehicles, the space industry, and even tunnel boring, he’s setting out to transform the brain machine interface business.

His vision is one of Lasik-like clinics where you can have a set of probes inserted into your cortex in a matter of minutes which has the ability to not only read what your neurons are doing, but can write to them as well–all through a wireless smartphone app.

Not surprisingly, early applications are focused on medical interventions, including the ability to counter the effects of neurological diseases like Parkinson’s disease, and restoring mobility to people with damaged spinal cords.

But what the folks at Neuralink really want to do is to create brain machine interfaces that massively enhance human performance–everything from gaming experiences where your brain is literally plugged into the console, to telepathy, and even symbiosis with artificial intelligence… [Read more]

Categories
Responsible Innovation

In Response to The Social Dilemma: A Practical Guide to Responsible Innovation

If you’ve seen The Social Dilemma on Netflix, you’ll have a pretty good idea of just how messy and harmful seemingly-good innovations can become.

The documentary highlights just how divisive social media platforms have become as they vie for the attention of users. And it warns against the dangers of manipulation as users become mere cogs in a money-making machine.

What it does less well is highlight how innovators and others might avoid making such irresponsible mistakes in the future, and how they can both create new products and services while improving and enhancing the lives of others, and not making an utter mess of things.

The latest YouTube video from Risk Bites tackles this challenge head-on, as it provides a practical guide to socially responsible innovation:

If you’re wondering where to go next with concerns over the unexpected and unwanted consequences of technology innovation, you might want to check it out!

Categories
College of Global Futures Future

Thoughts on David Attenborough’s A Life On Our Planet

I have a new blog post up on the ASU College of Global Futures blog — check it out here:

David Attenborough’s Call to Action in A Life on Our Planet is Compelling, but Flawed

If you haven’t yet seen David Attenborough’s new Netflix documentary A Life on Our Planet, you should. As a self-described “witness statement” on the state of our world from one of the most widely traveled and respected naturalists of our time, it’s sobering viewing. And its message deeply aligns with our mission in the College of Global Futures.

And yet for all its warnings of a planet in crisis, I found Attenborough’s perspective somewhat limited while watching the documentary, compelling as it is… [read more]

Categories
College of Global Futures

Blogging in the ASU College of Global Futures

With the formation of the new Arizona State University College of Global Futures, we’ve taken the bold step of launching a “Dean’s Blog” where my colleagues and I will be writing about our thoughts, ideas and perspectives.

I’ll be posting here every Friday, where I’ll be using the space to creatively explore ideas and insights at the intersection between science and technology, the future, and people; all within the context of my work and my role within the ASU College of Global Futures.

Categories
Films from the Future

The Music of Films from the Future

When I was writing Films from the Future, I immersed myself utterly in the soundtracks of the movies the book takes its inspiration from.

This, it turned out, was an incredibly powerful way of keeping my focus on the underlying social, emotional and aesthetic narratives that intertwine each film as I sought to tie these to technological narratives in the real world.

It also gave me a lasting love of the music these moves are built on — with one exception, these are epic sound tracks, and still inspire me!

Categories
Research

Aerosols in the Industrial Environment

(Or how to bury your work so deeply that no-one will ever know it existed in the first place!)

If there’s one piece of advice I’d give myself as a young researcher, it would probably be “never agree to write a book chapter!”

Of course, there are plenty of good academic book chapters around. But over the years I’ve sadly come to realize that this is the fastest way to make my work inaccessible to people who might otherwise benefit from it — partly because academic books are so expensive that few people can afford to read them!

However, I’ve just come across an even more effective way of ensuring no-one has a hope in hell of benefiting from your research: publishing a chapter in a book which is then dropped from subsequent editions.