Pitt Shield

Public Perceptions of Neurotechnologies Used to Target Mood, Memory, and Motor Symptoms.

Authors: Furrer RA, Merner AR, Stevens I, Zuk P, Williamson T, Shen FX, Lázaro-Muñoz G

Advances in the development of neurotechnologies have the potential to revolutionize treatment of brain-based conditions. However, a critical concern revolves around the willingness of the public to embrace these technologies, especially considering the tumultuous histories of certain neurosurgical interventions. Therefore, examining public attitudes is paramount to uncovering potential barriers to adoption ensuring ethically sound innovation. In the present study, we investigate public attitudes towards the use of four neurotechnologies (within-subjects conditions): deep brain stimulation (DBS), transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), pills, and MRI-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) as potential treatments to a person experiencing either mood, memory, or motor symptoms (between-subjects conditions). US-based participants (N=1052; stratified to be nationally representative based on sex, race, age) were asked about their perceptions of risk, benefit, invasiveness, acceptability, perceived change to the person, and personal interest in using these neurotechnologies for symptom alleviation. Descriptive results indicate variability between technologies that the U.S. public is willing to consider if experiencing severe mood, memory, or motor symptoms. The main effect of neurotechnology revealed DBS was viewed as the most invasive and risky treatment and was perceived to lead to the greatest change to who someone is as a person. DBS was also viewed as least likely to be personally used and least acceptable for use by others. When examining the main effects of symptomatology, we found that all forms of neuromodulation were perceived as significantly more beneficial, acceptable, and likely to be used by participants for motor symptoms, followed by memory symptoms, and lastly mood symptoms. Neuromodulation (averaging across neurotechnologies) was perceived as significantly riskier, more invasive, and leading to a greater change to person for mood versus motor symptoms; however, memory and motor symptoms were perceived similarly with respect to risk, invasiveness, and change to person. These results suggest that the public views neuromodulatory approaches that require surgery (i.e., DBS and MRgFUS) as riskier, more invasive, and less acceptable than those that do not. Further, findings suggest individuals may be more reluctant to alter or treat psychological symptoms with neuromodulation compared to physical symptoms.

Introduction

Purpose Other
Study Objective To investigate U.S. public attitudes toward four neurotechnologies (DBS, TMS, pills, and MRgFUS) as potential treatments for mood, memory, or motor symptoms.
Animal model / Human subject Human (Homo sapiens); strain: N/A; age: adults (nationally representative age distribution); sex: both male and female (stratified)
Disease model Healthy

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes Surveyed U.S. adults rated deep brain stimulation (DBS) as the most invasive, riskiest, most likely to change who someone is, and least acceptable/least likely to be used; surgical neuromodulation (DBS and MRgFUS) was viewed as riskier and less acceptable than noninvasive options (TMS, pills). Participants were most willing to use neuromodulation for motor symptoms, then memory, and least for mood, with mood seen as the riskiest and most identity-altering target.
Safety-related matter The public viewed surgical neurotechnologies—especially DBS and MRgFUS—as the most invasive and risky, with DBS rated as most likely to cause changes to a person's identity; neuromodulation was perceived as riskier and more invasive for mood versus motor symptoms. This survey study did not report any observed adverse effects.

Brain Region

Visualization unavailable

Ultrasound Parameters

Focal Characteristics Focal depth: None; Focal length: None; Aperture size: None

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