NeuroTech Future Conference

Description

A collaboration to discuss the technological, ethical, legal and policy issues surrounding emerging neurotechnologies.

About this Event

A Neurotech Future is a collaborative project between the Queen's University Centre for Neuroscience Studies, the Surveillance Studies Centre, and the Faculty of Law. This meeting brings together a diverse group of perspectives to discuss the technological, ethical, legal and policy issues surrounding emerging neurotechnologies.

Thurs Apr 22, 2021: Conference (Open to all)

Fri Apr 23, 2021: Workshop (By Invite)

Speakers (Click for Full Bios and Talk Abstracts)

Agenda:

A Neurotech Future: Ethical, Legal, & Policy Issues

Thursday, April 22, 2021 (open to public)

9:15am EST - Welcome from Provost (Mark Green) and Organizing Committee

9:30am EST - Panel 1: Separating neuroscience reality from science fiction

What is possible now, what is possible in the future, what may never be possible.

Chair: Gunnar Blohm (Queen’s Neuroscience)

· Steve Scott (Queen’s Neuroscience) Brain Computer Interfaces: A history and future directions.

· Ron Levy (Queen’s Neurosurgery) Current Neurosurgical challenges for BCIs.

· Graeme Moffat (System2) Non-invasive methods of measuring brain signals.

· Shideh Ameri (Queen’s Engineering) Graphene based skin-conformal sensor for EEG.

· Ali Etemad (Queen’s Engineering) Towards User-centered BCI.

11:30am EST - Keynote: Judy Iles (UBC, Neuroethics Canada)

Neuroethics as an Anchor for the Canadian Brain Research Strategy.

12:30pm EST - Lunch Hour: Neurotech Company Videos/Meet the Industry Break out Rooms

Merlin Neurotech (NeuroTechX), System 2, Interaxon, TeleMag, Zentrela, AwakeLabs, and KINARM

1:30pm EST - Panel 2: Neurotechnology, Surveillance and Data Privacy

Chair: David Lyon (Director, Queen’s Surveillance Studies Centre (SSC))

· Jason Gallivan (Queen’s Neuroscience) ‘Mind-reading’ with fMRI? Is it possible?

· Catherine Stinson (Queen’s Philosophy, Computing) The artifice of AI and mindreading.

· David Murakami-Wood (Queen’s SSC) Societal Impacts of Emerging Neurotechnologies.

· Brenda McPhail (Canadian Civil Liberties Association) Privacy in the Age of Neurotech.

3:00pm EST - Panel 3: Neurotechnologies and Implications for the Legal System

Chair: Martha Bailey (Queen’s Law)

· Samuel Dahan (Queen’s Law) Using AI for Conflict Resolution and Negotiation.

· Jennifer Chandler (UOttawa Law) Legal challenges of neurotech-enabled communication & decision-making.

· Teresa Scassa (UOttawa Law) Legislation (Bill C11) for data protection - Does it apply to brain data?

4:00pm EST - Keynote: John Weigelt (National Technology Officer, Microsoft)

Collaboration for success in policy and regulation: how industry, government, and civil society come together - lessons from responsible AI.

4:20pm EST - Panel 4: Policy and Regulation: Perspectives from Industry and the Government

Chair: Graeme Moffat (Munk School of Public Policy, University of Toronto; System2)

Discussion Panel: John Weigelt (Microsoft), Ariel Garten (Interaxon), Garth Smith (Ontario Brain Institute), Nathaniel Erskine-Smith (Member of Parliament, Canada).

5:00pm EST - Closing remarks (Susan Boehnke, David Lyon, Martha Bailey)

See our website to learn more.

To promote accessibility, this event is free to attend. If you would like to donate to future CNS initiatives, consider making a voluntary contribution here.

Organizer

Queen's University

Location

Online

Date & Time

April 22, 2021, 8 a.m. - April 22, 2021, 4 p.m.

Cost

$0

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