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  4. Ethical Governance Strategies for the Responsible Innovation of Neurotechnologies: A Scoping Review
 
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2025
Journal Article
Title

Ethical Governance Strategies for the Responsible Innovation of Neurotechnologies: A Scoping Review

Abstract
Following the recent surge in neurotechnology innovation and commercial investment, numerous academic bodies, government bodies, multilateral organizations, and industry leaders have produced ethical guidelines to govern neurotechnology innovation. Many highlight the need for new regulations to protect the rights and welfare of vulnerable individuals, while others warn about unnecessarily impeding innovation that provides urgent treatments to intractable conditions. Consensus on appropriate governance of neurotechnological innovation remains elusive. To fill this gap, we conducted a scoping review of the academic literature concerning the governance of neurotechnology development, identifying the ethical issues addressed, highlighting gaps or underdeveloped areas of neurotechnology governance, and the country in which they were developed. Fifty-one academic articles from the peer-reviewed literature were extracted, selecting those that referred to neurotechnologies and presented normative ethical guidelines or frameworks for their governance. We identified six common ethical themes (justice, beneficence and nonmaleficence, privacy and brain data, autonomy and informed consent, and, identity, dignity, and moral status) and six governance strategies proposed to address these themes (social responsibility and accountability, interdisciplinary collaboration, public engagement, scientific integrity, epistemic humility, legislation and neurorights). Discussions surrounding these themes lacked adequate consideration of diverse viewpoints, such as from the Global South, and were often underdeveloped, lacking both practical specificity and guidance to help developers balance competing priorities. Specifically, animal ethics and binding governance approaches were not adequately addressed, while neurorights were given undue consideration. Future guidelines should engage with these areas to aid in the development of more comprehensive and specific governance documents.
Author(s)
Robertson, Liam J.
Monash University
Higgins, Nathan
Monash University
Maier, Moritz Julian  
Fraunhofer-Institut für Arbeitswirtschaft und Organisation IAO  
Carter, Adrian
Monash University
Gardner, John G.
Monash University
Journal
Journal of bioethical inquiry  
Open Access
File(s)
Download (1.1 MB)
Rights
CC BY 4.0: Creative Commons Attribution
DOI
10.1007/s11673-025-10440-9
10.24406/publica-6572
Additional link
Full text
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Institut für Arbeitswirtschaft und Organisation IAO  
Keyword(s)
  • Ethics

  • Framework

  • Governance

  • Guidelines

  • Neurotechnology

  • Responsible innovation

  • Scoping review

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