Public opinion surveys report that the small fraction of people who know about
nanotechnology have a favorable view of it. This finding has led many to assume
that the public at large will respond favorably to nanotechnology applications
as popular awareness grows, education expands and commercialization increases.
But the results of an experiment, conducted by the Cultural Cognition Project
at Yale Law School in collaboration with the Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies
(PEN) and published Dec. 7 on the Nature Nanotechnology Web site, do not support
this "familiarity hypothesis."
The experiment found that how people react to information about nanotechnology
depends on cultural predispositions. Exposed to balanced information, people
with pro-commerce values tend to see the benefits of nanotechnology as outweighing
any risks. However, people with egalitarian or communitarian values who are
predisposed to blame commerce and industry for social inequities and environmental
harm tend to see nanotechnology risks as outweighing benefits.
The study also found that people who have pro-commerce cultural values are
more likely to know about nanotechnology than others. "Not surprisingly,
people who are enthused by technology and believe it can be safe and beneficial
tend to learn about new technologies before other people do," said Dan
Kahan, Professor at Yale Law School and lead author of the Nature Nanotechnology
article. "So while various opinion polls suggest that familiarity with
nanotechnology leads people to believe it is safe, they have been confusing
cause with effect."
The findings of the experiment highlight the need for any nanotechnology information
and risk communication strategy to focus on message framing and to take an informed,
multi-audience approach, according to PEN experts.
"The message matters. How information about nanotechnology is presented
to the vast majority of the public who still know little about it can either
make or break this technology," says David Rejeski, the director of PEN.
"Scientists, the government and industry generally take a simplistic, 'just
the facts' approach to communicating with the public about a new technology.
But this research shows that diverse audiences and groups react to the same
information very differently."
Because perfecting the science of nanotechnology risk communication is essential
to society's realization of the full benefits of nanotechnology itself, PEN
experts believe that every major funding initiative directed at the development
of nanotechnology and the study of nanotechnology risks should include a risk-communication
component.
"Without investment in understanding how to explain the potential risks,
as well as the potential benefits, to the public, significant innovation could
be stifled," Rejeski adds.
The study was conducted as part of a series of public opinion analyses being
conducted jointly by the Cultural Cognition Project and the Project on Emerging
Nanotechnologies. Previous experiments, which also examined the influence of
emotion and the identity of information providers on public attitudes, can be
found at www.nanotechproject.org/yale.