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I Neurotechnologies and AI: State of the Art: Non-invasive Brain-Computer Communication: from basic science to application
Towards a framework for the responsible development and use of intelligent neurotechnology
II Philosophical aspects: Assessing human responsibility for actions mediated by neurotechnology: Complications, confusions and questions
Will the real cyborg please stand up?
Consenti et faciam quod vis? Anthropological and ethical implications of consenting to Black Box-algorithms
Speech BCIs
Agency, Responsibility, Selves, and the Mechanical Mind
TBA (project member)
III Legal aspects: Diffusion on both ends
legal protection and criminalisation in neurotechnological uncertainty
Brain-computer interfaces and the law
IV Social aspects: Eric Racine (University of Montreal) & Matthew Sample (University of Montreal): Pragmatism in a Digital Society: Unpacking the (In)Significance of Emerging Digital Technologies for Academics and Their Publics
The Utopian Mundane: A Design Perspective on Future Technologies
V Applications: TBA (invited for neurotech and nursing)
Ethical implications of medical BCIs
Subjectivation by Neurotechnologies: Some Irritating Implications
Ethics of neuroprothetics
Security Implications of Neurotechnology & Artificial Intelligence
Connecting Brain and Machine: When your mind can directly interact with technology
Wired emotions: affective brain-computer interfaces and beyond
TBA (invited for brain hacking)
Ethics and Brain-Computer Interfaces: A Mixed-Methods-Study with Healthy Users
In your (inter- )face! Between participation and competitive interest Findings from an empirical interview study with brain-computer interface users
Philosophical and ethical implications of Brain-to-Brain Interfaces.

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