RESUMO
Scientists around the globe are joining the race to achieve engineering feats to read, write, modulate, and interface with the human brain in a broadening continuum of invasive to non-invasive ways. The expansive implications of neurotechnology for our conception of health, mind, decision-making, and behavior has raised social and ethical considerations that are inextricable from neurotechnological progress. We propose "socio-technical" challenges as a framing to integrate neuroethics into the engineering process. Intentionally aligning societal and engineering goals within this framework offers a way to maximize the positive impact of next-generation neurotechnologies on society.
Assuntos
Princípios Morais , Neurociências , Encéfalo , HumanosRESUMO
EEG is a powerful and affordable brain sensing and imaging tool used extensively for the diagnosis of neurological disorders (e.g. epilepsy), brain computer interfacing, and basic neuroscience. Unfortunately, most EEG electrodes and systems are not designed to accommodate coarse and curly hair common in individuals of African descent. In neuroscience studies, this can lead to poor quality data that might be discarded in scientific studies after recording from a broader population set. In clinical diagnoses, it may lead to an uncomfortable and/or emotionally taxing experience, and, in the worst cases, misdiagnosis. Our prior work demonstrated that braiding hair in cornrows to expose the scalp at target locations leads to reduced electrode-skin impedance for existing electrodes. In this work, we design and implement novel electrodes that harness braided hair, and demonstrate that, across time, our electrodes, in conjunction with braiding, lower the impedance further, attaining 10x lower impedance than existing systems.