Table S1: Full item wording

PDF Document

It appears your Web browser is not configured to display PDF files. Download adobe Acrobat or click here to download the PDF file.

License

Creative Commons Licence

Contributed date

September 13, 2022 - 4:11pm

Critical Commentary

In the study by Sample et al. (2022), most rehabilitation professionals reported that they had little or no prior knowledge of brain-computer interfaces. For this reason, the specific wording used to introduce brain-computer interfaces, as well as the wording of subsequent question about ethics and society, are important for the interpretation of Sample's results. The authors therefore have provided several important components of the survey as source material. This data details the wording for several societal “domains of application”, about which respondents reported their “worry” and “enthusiasm.” Find the other data linked here and further details about the data and study in the associated data availability statement.

Source

This excerpt from the survey instrument is part of the source data for the article "Brain-Computer Interfaces, Inclusive Innovation, and the Promise of Restoration: A Mixed-Methods Study with Rehabilitation Professionals" by Matthew Sample et al. published in the journal Engaging Science, Technology, and Society.

Group Audience

Tags

Cite as

Matthew Sample, Wren Boehlen, Sebastian Sattler, Stefanie Blain-Moraes and Eric Racine, "Table S1: Full item wording ", contributed by Engaging Science, Technology, and Society, Engaging Science, Technology, and Society (ESTS) Journal, STS Infrastructures, Platform for Experimental Collaborative Ethnography, last modified 13 September 2022, accessed 27 December 2024. https://stsinfrastructures.org/content/table-s1-full-item-wording